NIH ASKS PARTICIPANTS IN WOMEN'S HEALTH INITIATIVE TO ENTER FOLLOWUP PHASE
Posted March 2, 2004
Statement from Barbara Alving, MD, Director of the
Women's Health Initiative and Acting Director of the
National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute
The National Institutes of Health (NIH) has instructed
participants in the estrogen-alone study of the Women's
Health Initiative (WHI), a large multi-center trial, to
stop taking their study pills and to begin the follow-up
phase of the study.
Letters have been sent to all participants in the estrogen-
alone study, 11,000 healthy postmenopausal women who have
had a hysterectomy, informing them of a recent NIH review
of the study data. After careful consideration of the data,
NIH has concluded that with an average of nearly 7 years of
follow-up completed, estrogen alone does not appear to
affect (either increase or decrease) heart disease, a key
question of the study. At the same time, estrogen alone
appears to increase the risk of stroke and decrease the
risk of hip fracture. It has not increased the risk of
breast cancer during the time period of the study.
The increased risk of stroke in the estrogen-alone study is
similar to what was found in the WHI study of estrogen plus
progestin when that trial was stopped in July 2002. In that
study, women taking estrogen plus progestin had 8 more
strokes per year for every 10,000 women than those taking
the placebo. The NIH believes that an increased risk of
stroke is not acceptable in healthy women in a research
study. This is especially true if estrogen alone does not
affect (either increase or decrease) heart disease, as
appears to be the case in the current study.
The NIH has determined that the results would not likely
change if the estrogen trial continued to its planned
completion in 2005. Furthermore, enough data have been
obtained to assess the overall risks and benefits of the
use of estrogen in this trial. WHI researchers have begun a
detailed analysis of the data from the estrogen-alone study
and expect to report full results in the next two months.
The report, to be published in a peer-reviewed journal,
will include additional data collected through the end of
February 2004.
A separate report will contain information on probable
dementia and/or mild cognitive impairment in the women age
65 and older who participated in the estrogen-alone WHI-
Memory Study (WHIMS), an ancillary study of the WHI Hormone
Trials. Preliminary data suggest that for the WHIMS
participants who were on estrogen alone when compared to
the women who were taking the placebo, there was a trend
toward increased risk of probable dementia and/or mild
cognitive impairment.
The WHI estrogen study was designed to assess the effect of
long-term use of hormone therapy in healthy postmenopausal
women on the prevention of heart disease and hip fractures,
and any associated change in risk for breast cancer. It was
not designed to evaluate the short-term risks and benefits
of hormones for the treatment of moderate to severe
menopausal symptoms.
The estrogen-alone study involved women ages 50 to 79
years. Study participants were randomly assigned to a daily
dose of estrogen -- 0.625 mg/day of conjugated equine
estrogen (Premarin [TM]) -- or a placebo.
The NIH decision to stop the estrogen-alone trial was made
on February 2, 2004. In November and December 2003, the WHI
Data and Safety Monitoring Board (DSMB), an independent
advisory committee which regularly reviews study data and
oversees the safety of study participants, reviewed the
latest data from the estrogen-alone study. The DSMB was
split as to whether the study pills should be stopped or
whether the pills should be continued, provided that a
letter would be sent to the participants clearly informing
them of the stroke risks and other findings. After careful
review, the NIH decided that women in the estrogen-alone
study should stop taking their study pills.
The NIH advises women to continue to follow the FDA
guidance regarding hormone therapy. Currently the FDA
advises postmenopausal women who use or are considering
using estrogen or estrogen with progestin to discuss the
benefits and risks with their physicians. These products
are approved therapies for relief from moderate to severe
hot flashes and symptoms of vulvar and vaginal atrophy.
Although hormone therapy is effective for the prevention of
postmenopausal osteoporosis, therapy should only be
considered for women at significant risk of osteoporosis
who cannot take non-estrogen medications. The FDA
recommends that estrogens and progestins should be used at
the lowest doses for the shortest duration needed to
achieve treatment goals.
The WHI involves over 161,000 women who are either
participating in a set of clinical trials to test
preventive measures for heart disease, fractures, breast
and colorectal cancer, or in a large observational study.
In addition to the trials of estrogen alone and estrogen
plus progestin, other WHI trials are studying a low-fat
eating pattern and calcium/Vitamin D supplementation. These
trials are continuing.
Participants in all of the WHI studies will be informed
about the detailed results of the estrogen-alone study at
the time of their publication in the next two months.
The estrogen-plus-progestin trial was stopped after 5.6
years of follow-up because of an increased risk of breast
cancer and because the risk of breast cancer, coronary
heart disease, stroke, and blood clots outweighed the
benefits on hip fracture and colorectal cancer.
Participants in the combined hormone therapy study were
assigned to either estrogen plus progestin (0.625 mg of
conjugated equine estrogens plus 2.5 mg of
medroxyprogesterone acetate) or to a placebo. Since these
women had a uterus, they were given progestin in
combination with estrogen, a practice known to prevent
endometrial cancer. Women who were enrolled in the active
phase of the estrogen-plus-progestin study are currently in
a follow-up phase and, like participants in the estrogen-
alone study, will be monitored to assess long-term effects
of hormone use.
WHI is sponsored by the National Heart, Lung, and Blood
Institute (NHLBI) in collaboration with the National Cancer
Institute, the National Institute of Arthritis and
Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases, the National Institute
on Aging, and the Office of Research on Women's Health.
Note: Wyeth Ayerst Research provided the active hormone for
the estrogen-alone study and funded the WHIMS study.
NHLBI is part of the National Institutes of Health (NIH),
the Federal Government's primary agency for biomedical and
behavioral research. NIH is a component of the U.S.
Department of Health and Human Services. Additional
information on menopausal hormone therapy, including the
WHI estrogen-plus-progestin study, can be found on the NIH
Website: www.nih.gov, on the NHLBI Website:
www.nhlbi.nih, and on the FDA Website: A href="http://www.fda.gov">www.fda.gov