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Effects of aromatase inhibitor therapy on adiposity and cardiometabolic health in postmenopausal women: a controlled cohort extension study

PURPOSE: We previously demonstrated that 12 months of aromatase inhibitor (AI) treatment was not associated with a difference in body composition or other markers of cardiometabolic health when compared to controls. Here we report on the pre-planned extension of the study. The pre-specified primary...

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Autores principales: Cheung, Yee-Ming M, Hoermann, Rudolf, Van, Karen, Wu, Damian, Healy, Jenny, Halim, Bella, Raval, Manjri, McGill, Maria, Al-Fiadh, Ali, Chao, Michael, White, Shane, Yeo, Belinda, Zajac, Jeffrey D, Grossmann, Mathis
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Bioscientifica Ltd 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10503251/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37522858
http://dx.doi.org/10.1530/EC-23-0076
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author Cheung, Yee-Ming M
Hoermann, Rudolf
Van, Karen
Wu, Damian
Healy, Jenny
Halim, Bella
Raval, Manjri
McGill, Maria
Al-Fiadh, Ali
Chao, Michael
White, Shane
Yeo, Belinda
Zajac, Jeffrey D
Grossmann, Mathis
author_facet Cheung, Yee-Ming M
Hoermann, Rudolf
Van, Karen
Wu, Damian
Healy, Jenny
Halim, Bella
Raval, Manjri
McGill, Maria
Al-Fiadh, Ali
Chao, Michael
White, Shane
Yeo, Belinda
Zajac, Jeffrey D
Grossmann, Mathis
author_sort Cheung, Yee-Ming M
collection PubMed
description PURPOSE: We previously demonstrated that 12 months of aromatase inhibitor (AI) treatment was not associated with a difference in body composition or other markers of cardiometabolic health when compared to controls. Here we report on the pre-planned extension of the study. The pre-specified primary hypothesis was that AI therapy for 24 months would lead to increased visceral adipose tissue (VAT) area when compared to controls. METHODS: We completed a 12-month extension to our prospective 12-month cohort study of 52 women commencing AI treatment (median age 64.5 years) and 52 women with breast pathology not requiring endocrine therapy (63.5 years). Our primary outcome of interest was VAT area. Secondary and exploratory outcomes included other measures of body composition, hepatic steatosis, measures of atherosclerosis and vascular reactivity. Using mixed models and the addition of a fourth time point, we increased the number of study observations by 79 and were able to rigorously determine the treatment effect. RESULTS: Among study completers (AI = 39, controls = 40), VAT area was comparable between groups over 24 months, the mean-adjusted difference was −1.54 cm(2) (95% CI: −14.9; 11.9, P = 0.79). Both groups demonstrated parallel and continuous increases in VAT area over the observation period that did not diverge or change between groups. No statistically significant difference in our secondary and exploratory outcomes was observed between groups. CONCLUSIONS: While these findings provide reassurance that short-to-medium-term exposure to AI therapy is not associated with metabolically adverse changes when compared to controls, risk evolution should be less focussed on the AI-associated effect and more on the general development of cardiovascular risk over time.
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spelling pubmed-105032512023-09-16 Effects of aromatase inhibitor therapy on adiposity and cardiometabolic health in postmenopausal women: a controlled cohort extension study Cheung, Yee-Ming M Hoermann, Rudolf Van, Karen Wu, Damian Healy, Jenny Halim, Bella Raval, Manjri McGill, Maria Al-Fiadh, Ali Chao, Michael White, Shane Yeo, Belinda Zajac, Jeffrey D Grossmann, Mathis Endocr Connect Research PURPOSE: We previously demonstrated that 12 months of aromatase inhibitor (AI) treatment was not associated with a difference in body composition or other markers of cardiometabolic health when compared to controls. Here we report on the pre-planned extension of the study. The pre-specified primary hypothesis was that AI therapy for 24 months would lead to increased visceral adipose tissue (VAT) area when compared to controls. METHODS: We completed a 12-month extension to our prospective 12-month cohort study of 52 women commencing AI treatment (median age 64.5 years) and 52 women with breast pathology not requiring endocrine therapy (63.5 years). Our primary outcome of interest was VAT area. Secondary and exploratory outcomes included other measures of body composition, hepatic steatosis, measures of atherosclerosis and vascular reactivity. Using mixed models and the addition of a fourth time point, we increased the number of study observations by 79 and were able to rigorously determine the treatment effect. RESULTS: Among study completers (AI = 39, controls = 40), VAT area was comparable between groups over 24 months, the mean-adjusted difference was −1.54 cm(2) (95% CI: −14.9; 11.9, P = 0.79). Both groups demonstrated parallel and continuous increases in VAT area over the observation period that did not diverge or change between groups. No statistically significant difference in our secondary and exploratory outcomes was observed between groups. CONCLUSIONS: While these findings provide reassurance that short-to-medium-term exposure to AI therapy is not associated with metabolically adverse changes when compared to controls, risk evolution should be less focussed on the AI-associated effect and more on the general development of cardiovascular risk over time. Bioscientifica Ltd 2023-09-06 /pmc/articles/PMC10503251/ /pubmed/37522858 http://dx.doi.org/10.1530/EC-23-0076 Text en © the author(s) https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License. (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/)
spellingShingle Research
Cheung, Yee-Ming M
Hoermann, Rudolf
Van, Karen
Wu, Damian
Healy, Jenny
Halim, Bella
Raval, Manjri
McGill, Maria
Al-Fiadh, Ali
Chao, Michael
White, Shane
Yeo, Belinda
Zajac, Jeffrey D
Grossmann, Mathis
Effects of aromatase inhibitor therapy on adiposity and cardiometabolic health in postmenopausal women: a controlled cohort extension study
title Effects of aromatase inhibitor therapy on adiposity and cardiometabolic health in postmenopausal women: a controlled cohort extension study
title_full Effects of aromatase inhibitor therapy on adiposity and cardiometabolic health in postmenopausal women: a controlled cohort extension study
title_fullStr Effects of aromatase inhibitor therapy on adiposity and cardiometabolic health in postmenopausal women: a controlled cohort extension study
title_full_unstemmed Effects of aromatase inhibitor therapy on adiposity and cardiometabolic health in postmenopausal women: a controlled cohort extension study
title_short Effects of aromatase inhibitor therapy on adiposity and cardiometabolic health in postmenopausal women: a controlled cohort extension study
title_sort effects of aromatase inhibitor therapy on adiposity and cardiometabolic health in postmenopausal women: a controlled cohort extension study
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10503251/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37522858
http://dx.doi.org/10.1530/EC-23-0076
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