Dr. Ellen Grant, Lynne McTaggart and WDDTY Newsletter Launch
Muddled Personal Attack on Dr. John Lee and on Natural Progesterone
by Virginia Hopkins, healthwatch@johnleemd.net
Dr. John Lee and Dr. Ellen Grant had a longstanding
disagreement about natural progesterone and its effects, but until
recently it was a heated debate between physicians. Now Dr. Grant and
Lynne McTaggart have launched a personal attack against Dr. Lee in the
newsletter What Doctors Don’t Tell You (WDDTY). Dr. Grant’s article
about progesterone and breast cancer, titled “Cancer in a Cream?” sounds
convincing on the surface, but in truth it’s hopelessly muddled and
riddled with inconsistencies and inaccuracies.
Dr. Lee greatly admired the early and pioneering work
Dr. Grant did exposing the first birth control pills as dangerous, and
he felt she had been instrumental in galvanizing drug companies to
create safer oral contraceptives, probably saving thousands of lives in
the process. He expressed that admiration, both to her personally and in
his talks and books. The fact that Dr. Grant is now attacking someone
who isn’t here to defend himself speaks volumes, but there are many of
us who are here to defend Dr. Lee and set the record straight.
WDDTY Editor Lynne McTaggart introduces Dr. Grant’s
article in an editorial that describes Dr. Lee as “proselytizing” and
describes his point of view as “not only wrong, but dangerous.” The fact
is that the science and research behind Dr. Lee’s work is more solid
than ever, and new research comes out every month that supports it.
Thousands of doctors in clinical practice—which is where the rubber
meets the road—are turning to bioidentical hormones because they’re
safer and work better.
Dr. Ellen Grant and Lynne McTaggart of WDDTY
Make Factual Errors
In contrast, Dr. Grant’s article doesn’t even provide us
with a good scientific debate, because her reasoning is so muddled and
her foundational assertions aren’t correct. For example, Dr. Grant
continues to base many of her arguments about natural progesterone on
research with synthetic progestins. She admits they’re different, but
argues as if they’re the same. Yes, they have some common actions in the
body, but they also differ enormously. No reputable scientist or
physician disputes the fact that progesterone and progestins are
different, but Dr. Grant has continued to insist over the years that
research on progestins applies to progesterone. In her WDDTY article,
she repeatedly switches back and forth between statements about
progestins and progesterone, as if they are interchangeable.
Ms. McTaggart compounds this misunderstanding by
claiming that natural progesterone really isn’t natural because it is
“…a substance made in the laboratory by taking the sterol base of wild
yam and chemically tweaking it, adding molecules here and there until
you produced something with the same molecular blueprint as
ovary-derived progesterone.” Dr. Ellen Grant makes a similar statement,
that progesterone “…approximate[s] the compound [sic] the female ovary
produces.”
As Dr. Lee used to say, “a rose is a rose is a rose, and
progesterone is progesterone is progesterone.” It’s either progesterone,
or it’s not. It either has the same molecular structure, or it doesn’t.
The progesterone known as “natural” progesterone is the exact same
molecule as so-called ovary-derived or bioidentical progesterone. This
is a fact.
Research on Progesterone and Breast Cancer
After the factual errors, which cast a shadow over all
of Lynne McTaggart and Dr. Grant’s assertions, is the premise that one
can declare “progesterone causes breast cancer” based on in vitro
(test tube) research with a couple of breast cancer cell lines. As Dr.
Lee repeatedly pointed out, test tube research is one-dimensional, while
progesterone’s actions in the human body are affected and mediated by
dozens of other factors, including organs, glands, hormones, the immune
system, lifestyle and genes—to name a few. Test tube research can only
suggest a possible theory for further exploration.
Breast cancer researcher Dr. David Zava, our co-author
of What Your Doctor May Not Tell You about Breast Cancer,” and
a great friend and colleague of Dr. Lee, spent thousands of hours
studying these same breast cancer lines. He explains, “It’s ludicrous to
extrapolate this research to humans without an in-depth understanding of
biochemistry and physiology. The reality of how progesterone affects
breast tissue is far more complex—progesterone is only one piece of the
puzzle. The research Dr. Grant cites is good, solid scientific work, and
very interesting, but it is not even close to enough information to
declare that progesterone is carcinogenic. In fact, there’s far more
research showing the opposite—that progesterone is protective against
breast cancer—and in addition to that there’s clinical data, done with
real women that shows it’s protective.”
As for test tube studies, there are dozens, if not
hundreds, showing that progesterone reduces cell proliferation,
encourages apoptosis (cell death), and stimulates differentiation of
cells—all important factors in preventing breast cancer. There’s a buzz
out there right now in the research community about the p53 gene’s
possibilities in preventing and treating breast cancer and guess what?
Progesterone upregulates the p53 gene, a nice little piece of test tube
research done about a decade ago that pointed the way to much other
research on progesterone and p53.
Real Progesterone Research with Real Women
Let’s briefly review some of the clinical data—meaning
research with real, live human women—on progesterone and breast cancer.
If you’d like details and more research, please read What Your
Doctor May Not Tell You about Breast Cancer.
1) The earliest clinical study that we know of on
progesterone and breast cancer was done at Johns Hopkins University back
in 1981 (Cowan et al, American Journal of Epidemiology).
They measured estrogen and progesterone in a group of women, then
divided them into two groups: those with normal progesterone levels and
those with low progesterone levels. They followed these women for 20
years and found that in the women with low progesterone, the incidence
of breast cancer was over 80 percent greater than those with normal
progesterone, and the incidence of all cancers was ten times higher than
in women with normal progesterone.
2) In 1996, researchers measured women’s progesterone
before breast cancer surgery and found that those with normal
progesterone levels had an 18-year survival rate—twice that of women
with low progesterone at the time of surgery. (Mohr et al,
British Journal of Cancer)
3) Three studies in particular have shown progesterone’s
effect on breast cells. One, by Foidart et al and published in
the journal Fertility and Sterility in 1998 concluded,
“Exposure to progesterone for 14 days reduced the estradiol-induced
proliferation of normal breast epithelial cells in vivo.”
Another, by Malet et al and published in the Journal of
Steroid Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, in 2000 concluded,
“Cells exhibited a proliferative appearance after E2 [estradiol]
treatment, and returned to a quiescent appearance when P[rogesterone]
was added to E2. P[rogesterone] appear(s) predominantly to inhibit cell
growth, both in the presence and absence of E2.”
The third study tested the effects of transdermal
(rubbed into the skin) hormones in healthy young women planning to
undergo minor breast surgery for aesthetic reasons or for benign breast
disease. Ten to 13 days before surgery, four groups of women applied
either estradiol cream, progesterone cream, a combination of estradiol
and progesterone or a placebo cream (with no hormones in it). At
surgery, biopsies were done to measure estrogen and progesterone levels,
and the level of cell proliferation rates. (High levels of cell
proliferation is a marker for breast cancer.) The study demonstrated
that both hormones were well absorbed through the skin into the breast
tissue. But even more significant, estradiol increased cell
proliferation by 230 percent, whereas progesterone decreased it by more
than 400 percent. The estradiol-progesterone combination maintained the
normal proliferation rate. (Chang et al, Fertility and
Sterility)
4) In 2002, a French study of HRT in 3,175 women was
released. This was particularly interesting because it was a large
study, and because, to quote the study, “...the main specificity of the
French cohort is that 83% of the combined HRT users were receiving
mostly or exclusively a transdermal estradiol gel formulation, and the
progestin was oral micronized progesterone in 58%, while MPA users were
less than 3%.” Oral micronized progesterone is bioidentical, natural
progesterone, which is what most French women use, rather than the
synthetic progestins. The conclusion of the study was that, “When
both duration of use and the last period of use were analyzed together,
no significant increase in breast cancer incidence was observed in any
of the four subgroups considered,” and “From internal analysis, there
was no significant increase in the risk of breast cancer related to
use of the specific type of HRT most prescribed in France.”
Moderation and Common Sense are the Keys to
Optimal Health
One of the aspects of Dr. Lee’s character that I admired
most was his willingness to change course and moderate his message when
new evidence was brought to his attention. He was first led to
progesterone when he realized that the conventional HRT he had been
prescribing for years had probably harmed many women. He had the courage
to admit this first to himself, then to his patients, and he then set
about solving the puzzle of how to help women balance their hormones
safely and effectively. The discovery of progesterone as a neglected
piece of the hormone balance puzzle was exciting and yes, he was a man
on a mission to help women balance their hormones and to help undo the
damage of conventional HRT. As a result of his courage and zeal,
millions of women are healthier and happier.
From the beginning, Dr. Lee recommended no more than 15
to 30 mg of progesterone daily for the majority of women, and for
premenopausal women for just two weeks per cycle. This is a very
moderate dose that approximates what the ovary would be making in a
normal premenopausal woman. Furthermore, he advocated splitting the dose
and taking half in the a.m. and half in the p.m.
There’s no doubt that it’s not a good idea for most
women to take large doses of progesterone in any form over a long period
of time. That’s just not good medicine, it’s not balanced, it’s not
common sense, and it’s bound to cause trouble sooner or later. In his
first self-published book for doctors, Dr. Lee likened the “dance of the
steroids” to an orchestra, where each player creates beautiful music by
being in harmony and rhythm with the others. Large doses of progesterone
will drown out the other players and create chaos.
As zealous as Dr. Lee was about progesterone, his
message was never just about one hormone. He always strongly
advocated a wholesome diet, moderate exercise, good sleep, stress
management, healthy relationships with others, and the importance of
making time for fun and for contemplation.
The quest for optimal health is never-ending, and
ever-changing, and is best addressed on all levels: physical, emotional,
mental and spiritual. There’s no magic potion or lotion. Optimal health
is an ongoing, evolving journey of discovery.
Please Pass This On
The Dr. Ellen Grant – Lynne McTaggart article has
created quite a stir because it was widely spread around on the
internet, and as I said earlier, it sounds quite convincing if
you’re not familiar with the research. However, the information on
breast cancer, as well as the additional information about progesterone
and the immune system, isn’t accurate or convincing once you have the
facts in hand.
There’s a lot of misinformation about progesterone being
spread around right now. It’s probably not coincidental that this
well-financed and well-orchestrated campaign coincides with
Wyeth-Ayerst’s petition to the FDA demanding that compounding
pharmacists not be allowed to dispense natural hormones. (Wyeth-Ayerst
is the maker of PremPro.) If they succeed in pressuring the
FDA into making progesterone made a prescription-only, brand name drug,
it will be interesting to watch how quickly they come out with a
progesterone cream, patch or pill themselves.
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