Recent reversal of trends in hormone therapy use in a European population

Objective:The impact of the Women's Health Initiative (WHI) randomized trial results published in July 2002 indicating that hormone therapy (HT) is potentially harmful for the heart and the mammary gland of naturally postmenopausal women was assessed for the first time in a European population. Design:This study continuously monitored HT use from 1994 through 2003 in a population-based random sample of 5,758 women aged 35 to 74 years residing in Geneva (city and canton), Switzerland, yielding 1,938 naturally postmenopausal women with an intact uterus and 206 artificially postmenopausal women. Women in the former subgroup weighed substantially less than their WHI trial counterparts but were not otherwise at lower risk for cardiovascular disease. Results:Among the naturally postmenopausal women with an intact uterus, current HT use increased from 29% to 46% (P < 0.0001) through July 2002 and then decreased abruptly to 31% in 2003. Current HT use remained stable (range, 38%-46%; trend P = 0.92) among the artificially postmenopausal women. Conclusions:Successive annual increases from 1994 through 2001 in the prevalence of current HT use by postmenopausal women living in Geneva were dramatically reversed to the level in 1994 just after the results of the WHI trial were published, but only for naturally postmenopausal women with an intact uterus. Approximately one in three of the latter women who stopped using HT may also have lost its beneficial effects on bone health.