Posted on June 22, 2004
Older women using estrogen-alone hormone therapy could be
at a slightly greater risk of developing dementia,
including Alzheimer's disease (AD), than women who do not
use any menopausal hormone therapy, according to a new
report by scientists with the Women's Health Initiative
Memory Study (WHIMS). The scientists also found that
estrogen alone did not prevent cognitive decline in these
older women. These findings from WHIMS appear in the June
23/30, 2004, Journal of the American Medical
Association.
"These studies further support last year's recommendations
that menopausal hormone therapy should not be used to
prevent cognitive decline or dementia in older
postmenopausal women," stated Judith A. Salerno, MD, MS,
Deputy Director of the National Institute on Aging (NIA).
"Women should follow the Food and Drug Administration's
recommendation that those who want to use menopausal
hormone therapy to control their menopausal symptoms should
use it at the lowest effective dose for the shortest time
necessary."
The latest findings were reported by WHIMS Principal
Investigator Sally A. Shumaker, PhD, Wake Forest University
School of Medicine, and her colleagues at the 39 study
sites. This research was funded by Wyeth Pharmaceuticals,
which manufactures Premarin(tm), the conjugated equine
estrogens used in this trial, and Wake Forest University
Baptist Medical Center. WHIMS is a substudy of the Women's
Health Initiative (WHI) Hormone Trial, which is funded by
the National Institutes of Health (NIH) at the Department
of Health and Human Services (DHHS). The National Institute
on Aging (NIA), a component of NIH, has been involved in
reviewing the current findings as the lead NIH institute on
age-related cognitive change and dementia.
The WHI Hormone Trial using estrogen plus progestin was
stopped early in July 2002 when researchers found an
increased risk of breast cancer, along with greater risks
of heart disease, stroke, and blood clots, and determined
that these risks outweighed the benefits of reduced risks
of hip fracture and colorectal cancer. In May 2003, WHIMS
investigators reported the results of the estrogen plus
progestin part of their memory substudy**. They found that
estrogen plus progestin increased the risk of probable
dementia in women 65 and older and did not preserve
cognitive function. This part of WHIMS was also stopped in
July 2002.
At the end of February 2004, the remaining parts of the WHI
Hormone Trial and WHIMS, the estrogen-alone components,
were halted because results were showing an increased risk
of stroke and no reduction in the risk of heart disease in
the women using estrogen alone. Scientists further believed
that continuing the study until its planned conclusion next
year would probably not add new information. In April 2004,
the WHI investigators reported that they found an increased
risk of blood clots, but no significant effect on breast or
colorectal cancer and also a reduced risk of fractures in
those women using estrogen alone.
Now, the WHIMS scientists have evaluated the cognition and
dementia data from the estrogen-alone part of the trial.
Some 2,947 women age 65 to 79 at the beginning of the trial
received estrogen alone (a daily dose of 0.625 mg of
Premarin) or a placebo. (The women received estrogen alone
because they had all had hysterectomies at some time before
beginning the study. A progestin is used with estrogen in
menopausal hormone therapy in any woman with a uterus to
prevent thickening and, sometimes, cancer of the lining of
the uterus, the endometrium. Because the uterus is removed
in a hysterectomy, there is no need for progestin when
women who have had hysterectomies use menopausal hormone
therapy.)
Participants were determined to be dementia free before
they were enrolled in WHIMS. At the beginning and then
annually for the more than 5-year average duration of the
trial, WHIMS participants were evaluated to determine if
they might have developed dementia or mild cognitive
impairment (MCI). All women received the Modified Mini
Mental State Exam (3MSE), and those suspected of having
dementia also received an extensive clinical evaluation by
a specialist physician.
At the end of the study, the risk of dementia in the
estrogen-alone group was 49% higher than the risk in women
using the placebo. That is, among 10,000 women using
conjugated equine estrogens, 37 could be expected to
develop dementia, compared to 25 in 10,000 women using the
placebo - 12 extra cases of dementia in every 10,000 women
using estrogen alone each year. This increased risk was not
statistically significant.
Last year WHIMS scientists reported a 105% increase in the
risk of dementia in older women using estrogen plus
progestin compared to those using a placebo. That means, on
average, each year in 10,000 women over age 65 using
estrogen plus progestin there might be 45 cases of dementia
compared to 22 cases in 10,000 older women on placebo.
Almost half of the dementia cases in the estrogen-alone
study - 46% in older women using estrogen alone and 47% of
those in older women using the placebo - were Alzheimer's
disease (AD). Similarly, in the estrogen plus progestin
study, 50% of the cases in older women using estrogen plus
progestin and 57% of those in older women using placebo
were classified as AD.
A second article on general cognitive function *** from
Mark A. Espeland, PhD, and other WHIMS investigators
appears in the same issue of JAMA. It reports that
beginning estrogen-alone hormone therapy after age 65 can
have a small negative effect on overall cognitive abilities
and that this negative effect may be greater in women with
existing cognitive problems. The differences in scores on
cognitive testing for the estrogen-alone and placebo groups
were statistically significant, but the differences were so
small that they are not considered clinically relevant by
the investigators.
As with the earlier WHI and WHIMS result reports, these
increases in risk must be viewed in perspective.
Significant increases in risk are important for public
health officials who are concerned with large groups in the
population, where a small increase could have health
implications for millions of people. For an individual
woman, however, the increased risk is still quite small. (A
detailed discussion of risk is presented in the NIA Fact
Sheet, "Understanding Risk: What Do Those Headlines Really
Mean?", available online at
www.niapublications.org.
Further, these findings relate to women age 65 and older
taking this particular estrogen-alone hormone therapy. The
cognitive risks and benefits for younger women using
Premarin or other estrogen formulations are unknown. Any
younger woman who is considering menopausal hormone therapy
because of her menopausal symptoms should talk to her
doctor about how the various Women's Health Initiative
study findings relate to her own medical history and
treatment.