Ovarian tumors in a cohort of infertile women

Author affiliations (3)
  • University of Washington ROR
  • Faculty of Public Health ROR
  • Fred Hutch Cancer Center ROR

The New England journal of medicine, 331(12), 771-776, 1994

DOI 10.1056/NEJM199409223311204 PMID 8065405

Abstract

Background

Case reports and the results of a recent case-control study have raised questions about the potential neoplastic effects of medications used as treatment for infertility.

Methods

We examined the risk of ovarian tumors in a cohort of 3837 women evaluated for infertility between 1974 and 1985 in Seattle. Computer linkage with a population-based tumor registry was used to identify women in whom tumors were diagnosed before January 1, 1992. Data on infertility testing and treatment were abstracted from the medical records of women who had ovarian cancer and those of a randomly selected comparison group. The risk of ovarian tumors associated with exposure to ovulation-inducing medications was assessed through an age-standardized comparison with the rate of ovarian tumors in the general population, and Cox regression analysis was used to compare the risk of cancer among women who received these medications with the risk among infertile women who did not receive them.

Results

There were 11 invasive or borderline malignant ovarian tumors, as compared with an expected number of 4.4 (standardized incidence ratio, 2.5; 95 percent confidence interval, 1.3 to 4.5). Nine of the women in whom ovarian tumors developed had taken clomiphene; the adjusted relative risk among these women, as compared with that among infertile women who had not taken this drug, was 2.3 (95 percent confidence interval, 0.5 to 11.4). Five of the nine women had taken the drug during 12 or more monthly cycles. This period of treatment was associated with an increased risk of ovarian tumors among both women with ovarian abnormalities and those without apparent abnormalities (relative risk, 11.1; 95 percent confidence interval, 1.5 to 82.3), whereas treatment with the drug for less than one year was not associated with an increased risk.

Conclusions

Prolonged use of clomiphene may increase the risk of a borderline or invasive ovarian tumor.

Topics

clomiphene ovarian tumor cancer risk infertility, ovarian cancer risk infertility treatment clomiphene citrate, prolonged clomiphene use ovarian tumor cohort study, Rossing Daling clomiphene ovarian cancer risk, ovulation induction medications neoplastic effects ovarian tumors, infertility treatment ovarian cancer population-based registry, borderline malignant ovarian tumor clomiphene exposure, clomiphene 12 cycles ovarian tumor risk, fertility drug ovarian cancer standardized incidence ratio, long term clomiphene citrate safety ovarian malignancy
PMID 8065405 8065405 DOI 10.1056/NEJM199409223311204 10.1056/NEJM199409223311204

Cite this article

Rossing, M. A., Daling, J. R., Weiss, N. S., Moore, D. E., & Self, S. G. (1994). Ovarian tumors in a cohort of infertile women. *The New England journal of medicine*, *331*(12), 771-776. https://doi.org/10.1056/NEJM199409223311204

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