Yes, much more satisfying than writing paragraph after paragraph of bullshit hysterics. |
Then it’s not for you. So step off. I’m not in a breast cancer thread. You’re here for what purpose? Did you take HRT and then have your double mastectomy? No, right? STFU. |
Hm. Really. |
Uh oh. Forget to take your HRT this morning? I keep hearing on TikTok how it prevents cntiness. |
I don’t think she’s seeking peace. I think she’s searching for fights and is at unusually high risk for being beaten to death with a bag of satsumas in a Whole Foods parking lot. |
Obviously you’ve never had a satsuma. No one would dare to bruise them in a fight. |
DP. There is some evidence HRT may help, to some degree, but not a cure, and in some cases (like muscle pain) the effect is small and possibly outweighed by risks. Not to mention that there are so many different formulations of HRT that the dosages and combinations people are on have not been fully studied. I will consider HRT if my hot flashes start to disrupt sleep badly (but I will also look into the other new meds). I will ask my doctor about whether they recommend a DEXA scan to see if taking HRT to prevent osteoporosis makes sense. Otherwise, all the rest of the benefits are so far from being proven or as significant as those two that there’s no reason to even consider them in the calculus. |
Wow. Umm. |
But no one wrote that. You’ve misinterpreted that post, per your apparent usual. Are you a researcher or a physician? |
I don't know why it's necessary to question this. It's clear that there is a small absolute increase in the risk of breast cancer from taking combined (not estrogen-only, but if you have a uterus, you need combined, i.e. estrogen + progestin) HRT -- an annual increase in risk of about 0.1% per year. Over five years, that means the risk rises from roughly 23 in 1000 women (without HRT) to 28 in 1000 women (with HRT). That's real. The question really isn't whether that risk exists, it's about the risk-benefit ratio for each individual. |
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For those who want data and official medical positions, here's some research on HRT and type 2 diabetes. Summarizing, it shows that across multiple large randomized trials and meta-analyses, HRT with estrogen (with or without progestin) reduces the risk of developing type 2 diabetes on the order of 20–30% and improves insulin resistance and glucose control:
Margolis KL et al., Diabetologia 2004 — 15,641 postmenopausal women randomized and placebo controlled: https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s00125-004-1448-x Mauvais-Jarvis et al. 2017 – Endocrine Reviews https://academic.oup.com/edrv/article/38/3/173/3063786 Note that HRT does not have an FDA-approved prevention indication. The North American Menopause Society in their 2022 position statement said that they do NOT recommend starting HRT primarily to prevent diabetes, but that a diabetes-preventive effect is a real, evidence-based benefit in appropriate women (younger, early postmenopause): https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/35797481/ |
Many people on this thread have implied or stated that HRT is more beneficial than it is. That particular PP seemed to be implying that HRT is so beneficial that it will meaningfully reduce the number of women who need diabetes meds, SSRIs, and osteoporosis meds. |
Lol, "researcher".
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Sure. But since we are being so detailed about the absolute of HRT it is also important to be detailed about the absolute benefits: “The cumulative incidence of treated diabetes was 3.5% in the hormone therapy group and 4.2%” So there was 0.7% fewer diabetes cases in the HRT group. Hardly a stunning number on an individual level. These findings are probably most important to conclude that a woman with diabetes or at risk of it can take HRT without a negative impact on diabetes. |
Oh! Oh! Now do breast cancer risk!!!!! Let’s see those research skillz that clearly pay the bills. That is, if you’re not busy getting a lube-free fk from your devoted DH right now as you stalk this thread all day. |