Press Release
For more information, visit: http://www.interscience.wiley.com/journal/arthritis
Amy Molnar
(201) 748-8844/8852 (fax)
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Embargoed until September 2, 2005 at 12:01AM, ET
Arthritis & Rheumatism News Alert
Joint Pain and Estrogen Deprivation
Recent evidence suggests caution in prescribing hormone therapy for breast
cancer and sheds new light on “menopausal arthritis”
One of the most effective new treatments for breast cancer is a hormone therapy.
Aromatase inhibitors work by powerfully blocking the conversion of androgen
precursors into estrogens, which lowers estradiol levels in the bloodstream
and estrogen levels in peripheral tissues. Because aromatase inhibitors reduce
the rates of recurrence in women with early-stage postmenopausal breast cancer,
these agents are not only becoming widely used in breast cancer treatment,
but also being explored for their potential to prevent the disease in women
at high risk. While focusing on this therapy's promise, advocates have tended
to downplay one of its drawbacks. Women treated with aromatase inhibitors often
experience joint pain and musculoskeletal aching—severe enough, in some cases,
to make them stop the treatment.
Two noted researchers, David T. Felson, M.D., of Boston University Clinical
Epidemiology Unit, and Steven R. Cummings, M.D., of California Pacific Medical
Center Research Institute and University of California, San Francisco, have
thoroughly examined the evidence linking aromatase inhibitors and, more broadly,
estrogen deprivation joint pain. In the September 2005 issue of Arthritis & Rheumatism ( http://www.interscience.wiley.com/journal/arthritis),
they share their insights to alert oncologists, primary care physicians, and
other health care professionals to this widely overlooked, potential problem
for women.
“Estrogen's effects on inflammation within the joint are not well known,” Dr.
Felson and Dr. Cummings observe. Yet, as they note, estrogen has well-established
tissue-specific effects on inflammatory cytokines. Estrogen's role in joint
inflammation could account for the increased sensitivity to pain that some
women suffer with estrogen depletion. Citing studies of pharmacological suppression
of estrogen and studies of natural menopause, the authors offer a look at compelling
evidence associating estrogen deprivation with joint pain, including:
Aromatase inhibitors have been linked to higher rates of joint
and muscle pain than tamoxifen and placebo in various clinical trials for breast
cancer treatment and prevention. One example: In a National Cancer Institute
of Canada study, 5,187 postmenopausal women who completed a 5-year course of
tamoxifen therapy for breast cancer were randomized to a further 5 years receiving
the aromatase inhibitor letrozole or a placebo. 21 percent of women taking
letrozole reported joint pain compared with 16 percent of the women receiving
placebo.
In a study of leuprolide, a hormonal agent used to treat infertility
and a variety of gynecological disorders, 102 premenopausal women experienced
symptoms of estrogen deprivation, such as vaginal dryness, after 2 weeks of
treatment, and suffered joint pain between weeks 3 and 7 of treatment. Overall,
25 percent of the women developed persistent joint pain, affecting the knees,
elbows, ankles, and other areas, during the study. The pain was resolved in
all women between 2 and 12 weeks after stopping the leuprolide therapy.
In a postmenopausal estrogen/progestin intervention trial, women
who received estrogen had a significantly decrease chance of musculoskeletal
symptoms—between 32 and 38 percent—compared with women randomly assigned placebo.
Symptoms reported in the placebo group included joint pain, muscle stiffness,
and skull and neck aching. In other studies, however, estrogen replacement
therapy had no beneficial effect on musculoskeletal pain.
Dr. Felson and Dr. Cummings also highlight recent data showing that Asian
women undergoing menopause have lower estradiol levels than Caucasian women
and seem to be more vulnerable to a syndrome commonly known as “menopausal
arthritis.” They also note the high rate of both osteoarthritis and rheumatoid
arthritis in postmenopausal women. They conclude by stressing the need for
further research into the contribution of estrogen deficiency to arthritis,
as well as for recognizing the risks of musculoskeletal syndrome when prescribing
aromatase inhibitors and other estrogen-depleting treatments.
# # #
Article: “Aromatase Inhibitors and the Syndrome of Arthralgias With Estrogen
Deprivation,” David T. Felson and Steven R. Cummings, Arthritis & Rheumatism,
September 2005; 52:9; pp. 2594-2598.