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Query: UMLS:C0476089 (
endometrial cancer
)
11,379
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A review of prospective and retrospective epidemiologic studies of oral contraceptives (OCs) shows that in addition to pregnancy prevention, OCs provide other health benefits resulting from the antiestrogenic action of the progestin in the pills and from its main action, inhibition of ovulation. The antiestrogenic effects include reduction of risk of iron deficiency anemia by about 50% because of reduced menstrual blood loss. The Royal College of General Practitioners (RCGP) study reports that OCs protect about 7 of 1000 pill users/year from iron deficiency anemia, and that OC use significantly reduces the incidence of menstrual disorders (menorrhagia, irregular menses, intermenstrual bleeding). Other studies report elimination of endometrial hyperplasia (Sturdee et al.), 50% reduction in risk of
endometrial cancer
(Weiss and Sayvetz, Boston University Epidemiologic Survey), and reduction in incidence of benign breast diseases (at least 12 published studies). The noncontraceptive benefits resulting from inhibition of ovulation include significant reduction in the incidences of dysmenorrhea (RCGP study), functional ovarian cysts (RCGP study, Boston Collaborative Surveillance Program, Ory), and ovarian cancer (Beral et al., Casagrande et al.) OCs are also found to protect against rheumatoid arthritis (RCGP, Rochester Epidemiologic Project), and salpingitis or
pelvic inflammatory disease
(
PID
). 6 epidemiologic studies show that the relative risk of developing
PID
among pill users compared with nonusers ranges from 0.3 - 0.9. Increased OC use by the population at greatest risk--sexually active women between 15-24 years old--would significantly reduce
PID
with its high cost of treatment and resulting infertility. It is hoped that healthy young women will realize that OCs provide benefits (including prevention of unwanted pregnancy) that far outweigh their more widely publicized, infrequent risks.
...
PMID:Noncontraceptive health benefits of oral steroidal contraceptives. 706 59
Studies have documented the protective effects of oral contraceptives (OCs) against 5 diseases: 1) OCs prevent 50-75% of potential cases of benign breast disease; there is an estimated annual reduction of 235 hospitalized cases for every 100,000 U.S. women using OCs or about 20,000 hospitalizations each year. 2)OCs reduce the occurrence of retention cysts of the ovary; an estimated 3000 surgical procedures for ovarian cysts are prevented each year in the U.S. 3) OC users have approximately 45% less iron-deficiency anemia than nonusers due to less menstrual flow. 4) OCs protect against the development of
pelvic inflammatory disease
(
PID
); 600 of every 100,000 OC users are prevented from contracting a 1st episode of
PID
and 156
PID
hospitalizations are averted for every 100,000 OC users annually. 5) OCs protect against ectopic pregnancy; approximately 120 hospitalizations/100,000 users are prevented annually. 3 additional diseases may be prevented by OCs, although the evidence is not as conclusive as for the 5 previously discussed; OC users are only 1/2 as likely to develop: 1) rheumatoid arthritis, 2)
endometrial cancer
, and 3) ovarian cancer as nonusers. OCs have also been shown to reduce the incidence of such disorders as excessive menstrual bleeding, irregular menses, intermenstrual bleeding, painful menstruation, and premenstrual tension.
...
PMID:The noncontraceptive health benefits from oral contraceptive use. 711 6
During the 20 years since the oral contraceptive was introduced, it has been used by some 150 million women around the world, and is perhaps the most carefully monitored medication in history. This vast body of research shows that for the overwhelming majority of healthy women under 30, the benefits of the pill continue to outweigh the risks. The most serious life threatening risks are those involving the cardiovascular system: heart attack, stroke, and throboembolism. However, deaths from these causes would be reduced by 1/2 if women using the pill did not smoke; further reductions would result if women with high blood pressure, high chloresterol levels and diabetes millitus did not use the pill. There is no evidence thus far to justify fears that the pill might be associated with an increased risk of cancer. Most studies show that not only is there no association between pill use and cancer of the ovaries, uterus and breast, but pill use may protect against ovarian and
endometrial cancer
. Women taking the pill are 1/4 as likely to develop benign breast lumps as nonusers, 1/14 as likely to develop ovarian cysts, 2/3 as likely to develop iron deficiency anemia, and 1/2 as likely to develop rheumatoid arthritis -- all relatively common conditions. In addition,
pelvic inflammatory disease
, a major cause of infertility, appears to occur only 1/2 as often among pill users as among nonusers. The risk to life among pill users younger than 30 who do not smoke is very small (virtually the same as that of users of the IUD, diaphragm, or condom) and is much lower than the risk of birth-related deaths among women who use no birth control.
...
PMID:The pill at 20: an assessment. 720 90
Focus in this discussion of the pharmacology of gynecology is on the following: vaginal infections; genital herpes; genital warts;
pelvic inflammatory disease
; urinary infections; pruritus vulvae; menstrual problems; infertility; oral contraception; and hormone replacement therapy. Doctors in England working in Local Authority Family Planning Clinics are debarred from prescribing, and any patient with a vaginal infection has to be referred either to a special clinic or to her general practitioner which is often preferable as her medical history will be known. Vaginal discharge is a frequent complaint, and it is necessary to obtain full details. 1 of the most common infections is vaginal candidosis. Nystatin pessaries have always been a useful 1st-line treatment and are specific for this type of infection. Trichomonas infection also occurs frequently and responds well to metronidazole in a 200 mg dosage, 3 times daily for 7 days. It is necessary to treat the consort at the same time. Venereal diseases such as syphilis and gonorrhea always require vigorous treatment. Patients are now presenting with herpes genitalis far more often. The only treatment which is currently available, and is as good as any, is the application of warm saline to the vaginal area. Genital warts may be discovered on routine gynecological examination or may be reported to the doctor by the patient. 1 application of a 20% solution of podophyllum, applied carefully to each wart, usually effects a cure.
Pelvic inflammatory disease
seems to be on the increase. Provided any serious disease is ruled out a course of systemic antibiotics is often effective. Urinary infections are often seen in the gynecologic clinic, and many of these will respond well to 2 tablets of co-trimoxazole, 2 times daily for 14 days. In pruritus vulvae it is important to determine whether the cause is general or local. Menstrual problems regularly occur and have been increased by the IUD and the low-dose progesterone pill. Infertility necessitates investigation. It is helpful to use the temperature chart method to determine whether the patient is ovulating. Oral contraception merits only passing mention, i.e., the introduction of a new sequential pill containing ethynloestradiol and levonorgestrol. There is always the question of a possible relationship between long-term OC use and the development of
endometrial cancer
. There are certain definite indications for hormone replacement therapy, i.e., hot flushes, sweating and atrophic vaginitis.
...
PMID:The pharmacology of gynaecology. 744 23
Women throughout the world and throughout time have ingested substances such as mercury, diluted copper ore, and various noxious solutions in the mistaken belief that these substances would prevent pregnancy. The era of modern contraception began in 1937 with the discovery that the administration of progesterone could halt ovulation in rabbits. During the next decade, work proceeded on finding an easy and less expensive way to synthesize progesterone and to develop the synthetic estrogens mestranol and ethinyl estradiol. Initial trials in humans proved that these hormones could prevent ovulation. In 1950, with support from Margaret Sanger and Katharine Dexter McCormick, Gregory Goodwin Pincus developed the first oral contraceptive (OC), which consisted of supplemental progestin and 0.5 mg norethindrone. In the early 1990s, the Ortho Pharmaceutical Corporation introduced an OC that combined the synthetic progesterone norgestimate and 35 mcg of ethinyl estradiol. By 1988, several noncontracepting health benefits of the OC were recognized, including decreased rates of ovarian cancer,
endometrial cancer
,
pelvic inflammatory disease
, ovarian cysts, benign breast disease, iron deficiency anemia, and dysmenorrhea. These health benefits outweigh risks even in nonsmoking women over 40. In the US, 80% of women have used the OC at one time, and they are using this most popular form of reversible contraception longer than ever.
...
PMID:A history of oral contraception: from evolution to revolution. 767 Apr 17
Recent cohort and case control studies of low-dose combined oral contraceptives (COCs) containing the new generation of progestogens have allowed classification of adverse effects into those which are rare but serious and should be considered risks and those which are more frequent but are less of a threat to health. Low-dose COCs continue to affect coagulation in a complex way, but the risk is less than with the older preparations, and it can be minimized by screening women for a personal or familial history of early or unusual thrombosis and for levels of protein C, S, and antithrombin III. Women with true migraine with focal signs should also avoid using COCs. The relative risk of myocardial infarction (MI) may increase from 4:1 in women with one risk factor (age, smoking, hypertension, hyperlipidemia, and diabetes) to 20:1 with two risk factors and 128:1 with three or more risk factors. In the absence of all risk factors, a recent study indicated that the relative risk of MI with COC use was 1.9 for current and past use. COC use also causes a slight increase in hypertension in most women, especially those who are older or have a family history of hypertension. While the COC can affect carbohydrate and lipid metabolism, the new generation of progestogens has reduced these effects. The COC may accelerate presentation of gallbladder disease in predisposed women. The COC protects against benign breast disease but may increase the risk of breast cancer and cervical cancer slightly. There is a strong link between hepatocellular adenoma and COC use, but the incidence is low. Return to fertility after use has not been a problem. Both estrogenic adverse effects (nausea, dizziness, irritability, weight gain, bloating) and progestogenic adverse effects (vaginal dryness, acne, hirsutism, weight gain, depression, loss of libido) can occur in 50% of women, but these generally disappear after a few months of use. In conclusion, the low-dose, third generation COCs are associated with minimal risks in the absence of other risk factors and have many beneficial effects such as the prevention of ovarian and
endometrial cancer
; a decrease in
pelvic inflammatory disease
and ectopic pregnancies; and protection from anemia, primary dysmenorrhea, functional ovarian cysts, and benign breast disease as well as from the morbidity and mortality associated with pregnancy.
...
PMID:The combined oral contraceptive. Risks and adverse effects in perspective. 776 40
A comparative study was carried out in 350 women using VCu200 intrauterine devices (IUD) and 350 women using stainless steel ring (SSR) IUD for 5-18 years. The endometrial changes and shapes of IUD were studied. The results showed that the pregnancy rate was significantly lower in VCu200 group after 5 years of insertion. In spite of the oxidation, erosion or breakage of the copper wire, calcium deposit of even deformation of the IUD, they were not associated with an increased incidence of
endometrial carcinoma
and
pelvic inflammatory disease
. It is suggested that VCu200 IUD need not to be removed if the IUD keeps normal shape and the copper wire remains intact by X ray examination.
...
PMID:[Long-term clinical observation on VCu200 intrauterine devices]. 783 33
Mortality is the greatest concern in assessing risks of modern reversible contraception. The problems identified with older oral contraceptives (OCs) have decreased with the lower doses in current OCs. These problems include cardiovascular and thrombotic effects, changes in lipid metabolism, breast cancer, liver cancer, increased risk of chlamydia cervicitis, no protection against sexually transmitted diseases (STDs) and HIV, and interferes with breast feeding. On the other hand, OCs protect against anemia, menstrual disorders, ectopic pregnancy, acute
pelvic inflammatory disease
(
PID
), and ovarian and
endometrial cancer
. Since the contraceptive implant, Norplant, has no estrogens, it does not have the cardiovascular risks associated with OCs. Possible risks from Norplant use include changes in carbohydrate, liver, and lipid metabolism but they tend to be clinically insignificant and no protection against STDs/HIV. Menstruation disorders are the major side effect. Apparent benefits of Norplant are protection against anemia and ectopic pregnancy and no effect on lactation. The injectable contraceptive, Depo-Provera, causes menstrual changes, may slightly increase the risk of breast cancer, may decrease bone density, and does not protect against STDs/HIV. It protects against
endometrial cancer
. It has no effect on metabolism. Risks associated with the IUD include
PID
, perforation, anemia, increased menstrual bleeding, and pregnancy. IUDs do not affect the quantity of composition of breast milk. They are best suited for women in a mutually monogamous, long-term relationship. Barrier methods provide some degree of protection against STDs/HIV and
PID
. Condoms provide the most protection. They do not affect lactation. Their major complications are contraceptive failure and risks associated with pregnancy. For all women, especially those in high risk categories, one must balance the risks of modern contraceptive use with the risks of childbearing and with their benefits.
...
PMID:The safety of modern contraceptives. 784 6
Dr. David Grimes, professor and vice-chair of the Department of Obstetrics/Gynecology and Reproductive Sciences, University of California at San Francisco, spoke to the American Medical Association's Thirteenth Annual Science Reporters Conference in Seattle on November 7, concerning the health benefits of taking oral contraceptives. The risk of getting ovarian cancer decreases the longer the pill is used; this protection lasts at least 15 years after use has ended. Women who take the pill for a decade or longer reduce their risk of developing this cancer by 80%. The pill reduces the risk of
endometrial cancer
by as much as 50%; the protection is strongest in those at highest risk and lasts at least 15 years after use. The pill cuts the risk of
pelvic inflammatory disease
in half. The danger of ectopic or tubal pregnancy is reduced by 90%. By reducing menstrual flows, oral contraceptives increase the quality of life for women and reduce the risk of iron deficiency anemia. The progestin present in oral contraceptives substantially reduces the risk of benign breast disease. Oral contraceptives may protect against toxic shock syndrome, rheumatoid arthritis, and osteoporosis. A Gallup poll conducted in 1985 and early this year indicates gross misinformation and confusion about the pill among American women. While the pill should not be "pushed" on women by physicians, patients should be educated about the beneficial effects of taking the pill.
...
PMID:Report: the pill's health benefits appear to far outweigh its risks. 789 51
Depot medroxyprogesterone acetate (DMPA) is the only injectable contraceptive available in the United States. After more than 20 years of regulatory review, the Food and Drug Administration approved DMPA for contraceptive use in 1992 after the publication of reassuring data about its possible association with breast cancer. It has been used by 30 million women in more than 90 countries. The recommended dosage, 150 mg intramuscularly every 3 months, has a contraceptive efficacy exceeding 99%. After a 150 mg dose, ovulation is inhibited for at least 14 weeks. Almost all users experience menstrual changes, typically episodes of unpredictable irregular spotting and bleeding, particularly during the first year of use. With continued use, spotting and bleeding decrease, and amenorrhea becomes common. Although ovulation suppression may rarely persist for as long as 18 months after the last injection, DMPA does not permanently affect fertility. Long-term DMPA use reduces menstrual blood loss, has been associated with a decreased incidence of candidal vulvovaginitis and
pelvic inflammatory disease
, and dramatically lowers the risk of
endometrial cancer
. Prolonged DMPA use may be associated with reversible reduction in bone density, probably related to suppression of endogenous production of estrogen. The most recently published data suggest that long-term use of DMPA induces moderate changes in lipid metabolism that are unfavorable in terms of risk of atherosclerosis. DMPA should be considered a highly effective, safe, convenient, and reversible contraceptive option for appropriately selected patients.
...
PMID:Long-acting injectable contraception with depot medroxyprogesterone acetate. 817 4
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