Publication | Closed Access
Estrogen-Progestin Replacement Therapy and Endometrial Cancer
317
Citations
21
References
1997
Year
The progestin in sequential estrogen-progestin replacement therapy needs to be given for at least 10 days to block effectively any increased risk of endometrial cancer. Continuous combined estrogen-progestin therapy is similarly effective. Neither regimen reduces a woman's underlying risk of endometrial cancer. The sharp distinction between the effects of less than 10 days (effectively 7 days) and 10 or more days (effectively 10 days) of progestin use in sequential estrogen-progestin replacement therapy suggests that the extent of endometrial sloughing may play a critical role in determining endometrial cancer risk.
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