Hormone Therapy in Breast Cancer Survivors and Those at High Risk for Breast Cancer

Women and health care providers are often fearful of using hormone therapy to deal with distressing menopausal symptoms in circumstances where there is a perceived or real increased risk of breast cancer. This paper examines the evidence for and against hormone therapy use in 3 common clinical situations: the woman with a positive family history in a first-degree relative, the woman who has undergone risk-reducing salpingo-oophorectomy due to a known genetic mutation, and the woman in whom treatment of breast cancer has induced premature menopause.
Source: Clinical Obstetrics and Gynecology - Category: OBGYN Tags: Managing Menopause by Combining Evidence With Clinical Judgment Source Type: research