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By - Bahar Gholipour
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Posted By - Hampton Inn Santa Clarita
By - Bahar Gholipour
Category - Family Hotels In Santa Clarita
Posted By - Hampton Inn Santa Clarita
Family Hotels In Santa Clarita |
Taking one type of high blood pressure medication might increase women's risk of breast cancer, a new study suggests.
The researchers found women in the study who had been taking
calcium-channel blockers to treat high blood pressure for more than 10
years were 2.5 times more likely to have breast cancer, compared with
women who did not use blood pressure medication, or who used other
types.
"While the results are intriguing, we really need to wait until we see
confirmatory studies before we make any kind of recommendations," said
study researcher Dr. Christopher Li, an epidemiologist and breast cancer
researcher at Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center in Seattle.
"People should absolutely not stop taking their medication," Li said.
About 1,900 women with breast cancer participated in the study, as well
as about 850 women with no cancer who served as the control group. The
researchers didn't find a link between an increased breast cancer risk
and other types of high blood pressure medications, such as beta-blockers or diuretics, according to the study published today (August 5) in the Journal of the American Medical Association.
Medications for treating high blood pressure, called antihypertensives, are the most commonly prescribed
drugs in the United States with an estimated 678 million prescriptions
filled in 2010, including 98 million prescriptions for calcium-channel
blockers, the researchers said.
"This is not the first time that the specter of a link between [calcium-channel blockers] and breast cancer
risk has arisen," Dr. Patricia Coogan,professor of epidemiology at
Boston University, wrote in an editorial accompanying the study in the
journal.
But previous studies had yielded mixed results. They did not have a
sufficient number of participants, or did not investigate long-term use
of antihypertensives. The new study "is a very well-done study and
therefore there appears to be a hypothesis that now needs to be
confirmed," Coogan said.
The study shows a link, but does not prove a cause-and-effect relationship between the drugs and breast cancer.
The evidence "is not at the stage where women should be panicking about taking these drugs," Coogan told LiveScience.
Calcium-channel blockers work by slowing the movement of calcium into muscle cells, which dilates blood vessels, reduces the force of the heart's contractions and slows the heartbeat.
In deciding which drug to use to treat a patient's high blood pressure,
doctors may consider how the patient responds to different medications,
and their other conditions.
"There are people who don't tolerate some of the other classes of
medications, and respond well to calcium-channel blockers," said Dr.
Randy Wexler from the Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center, who
was not involved in the study.
"We still have to look at things in terms of the overall risk. Don't forget that heart disease is still one of the biggest problems in the United States," Wexler said.
However, if patients are concerned, and because there are several
classes of hypertensives, patients can certainly discuss their options
with their physician, and look into alternative blood pressure
treatments, Wexler said.
The next step in the current research would be to look at more groups
of people who take blood pressure medications, as well as to better
understand the underlying mechanism by which the calcium-channel
blockers may affect cancer risk, the researchers said.
"Antihypertensives only came on the market in the past few decades, so
there has not been sufficient number of long-term users of these
medications," Li said.
"We are now getting to the point where we have enough people who've
been exposed to these medications for long periods of time to evaluate
such long-term potential risks," he said.
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