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Reunion
2002

Focus on women's health

Two honored for service

Reunion faces

Reunion reports

Public Health

Spotlight on Surgery

Alumni Notes
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At this
years reunion, a focus on womens health and hormone replacement
Perhaps the most talked-about topic in womens health this summer
was hormone replacement therapy (HRT), given the news from the Womens
Health Initiative (WHI) study in early July that taking estrogen and progestin
does not protect the heart but in fact slightly increases the risk of
heart attack. A month earlier, HRT had been a central topic at this years
reunion.

Those attending the reunion weekend program heard that research at Yale
on the usefulness of HRT in preventing heart disease had also led to unexpected
results. Although Yale researcher Teresa L. Caulin-Glaser, M.D.,
found that hormone replacement provided some beneficial effect for postmenopausal
women in her study, the benefit was much less dramatic than had been anticipated
from her basic laboratory studies. In her talk, Caulin-Glaser illustrated
how results that look robust in the laboratory are not always borne out
in clinical trials.

Caulin-Glasers presentation was part of a symposium titled The
Growth of Women in Medicine: Progress That Benefits Us All. Also
on the program were Sonja V. Batten, Ph.D., newly arrived associate
director of Womens Health Research at Yale (co-sponsor of the panel
with the Office for Women in Medicine). Batten provided an overview of
the program, and Susan J. Baserga, M.D. 88, Ph.D. 88,
detailed the history of the admission of women to the School of Medicine
in 1916 (See
The Last Barrier, Summer 1998).

Like the researchers in the multisite WHI study, Caulin-Glaser had been
intrigued by studies showing that HRT for postmenopausal women might help
prevent heart disease. Observational data had suggestedbut not proventhat
if postmenopausal women with heart disease took hormones, they cut their
risk of a cardiac event in half. The promise of significant reductions
in vascular inflammation was suggested by Caulin-Glasers laboratory
studies, in which she treated human endothelial cells in culture with
estrogen. But hormones did not prove nearly as effective when she tested
them on human subjects.

Caulin-Glaser went on to study the effects of exercise, dietary changes
and stress reduction techniques on patients in cardiac rehabilitation.
Her findings that exercise and stress management do reduce vascular inflammation
suggest that the current failure of HRT to reduce heart disease does not
leave physicians empty-handed. If we can demonstrate the effectiveness
of life-style interventions in modulating inflammation, we will have very
powerful and safe therapies to offer our patients. She is frustrated
that physicians recommend cardiac rehabilitation for only 30 percent of
their patients, for twice as many men as women and for very few minority-group
members.

She was not surprised by the recent acknowledgment by the Womens
Health Initiative that HRT is no magic bullet. It is
important to appreciate that, although the study has finally given us
some solid clinical information to use when treating our patients, many
questions still remain, Caulin-Glaser said in August. From
a research and clinical perspective, it addressed only the use of a combination
HRT, estrogen and Provera. Issues not addressed by the study include the
effects of estrogen alone, estrogen in combination with less-potent progestins,
the use of different delivery routes and determining the safe length of
therapy.

Natures way of producing the exact combination of sex hormones
may be protective, but the way we are replacing them artificially may
be incorrect in dose, combination, delivery route and length of treatment,
she added. There is much to learn, and that is why the field is
so exciting. |
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