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Impact of Hormone Replacement Therapy on Risk of Ovarian Cancer in Postmenopausal Women with De Novo Endometriosis or a History of Endometriosis

Hee Joong Lee, Banghyun Lee, Hangseok Choi, Tae‐Hee Kim, Yejeong Kim, Yong Beom Kim

2023Cancers20 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The effect of hormone replacement therapy (HRT) on the malignant transformation of postmenopausal endometriosis remains unclear. This study aimed to investigate the impact of HRT on ovarian cancer occurrence in postmenopausal women with de novo endometriosis or a history of endometriosis. A total of 10,304 women that received HRT (the HRT group) and 10,304 that did not (the control group) were selected by 1:1 matching those that met the study criteria. Incidences of ovarian cancer (0.3% in the HRT group and 0.5% in the control group) and cumulative incidence rates of ovarian cancer were similar in the two groups. The overall mean duration of HRT was 1.4 ± 2.2 years, but the duration of HRT in women with ovarian cancer was 2.2 ± 2.9 years. After adjusting for co-variables, receipt of HRT, duration of HRT, combined use of estrogen and progesterone, and tibolone were not found to be risk factors for ovarian cancer. However, the use of estrogen alone was found to be a significant risk factor for ovarian cancer (HR 2.898; 95% CI 1.251–6.715; p = 0.013). With the exception of HRT using estrogen alone, HRT did not increase the risk of ovarian cancer in postmenopausal women with a history of endometriosis or de novo endometriosis.

Topics & Concepts

EndometriosisMedicineGynecologyPostmenopausal womenHormone replacement therapy (female-to-male)Ovarian cancerCancerHormone therapyOncologyInternal medicineBreast cancerTestosterone (patch)Endometriosis Research and TreatmentEndometrial and Cervical Cancer TreatmentsEstrogen and related hormone effects