This story was first published in digitalhealth.net

Research conducted by the University of Aberdeen has indicated that women who have taken the oral contraceptive pill are protected against some types of cancer for as long as thirty years.
The results, published in the American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynaecology, showed that having ever used the pill, women are less likely to have colorectal cancer, endometrial cancer or ovarian cancer than women who had never used the pill.
The study involved 6,000 women, followed for up to 44 years, creating more than 1.2 million woman-years of observation. It examined the risk of all types of cancer in women who have taken the pill and found that women using the pill during their reproductive years does not produce new cancer risks later in life – the time when more cancers occur.
Established by the Royal College of General Practitioners’ in 1968, the Oral Contraception Study investigates the long-term health effects of oral contraceptives.
Dr Lisa Iversen, Research Fellow in the Institute of Applied Health Sciences at the University said: “Because the study has been going for such a long time we are able to look at the very long term effects, if there are any, associated with the pill.
What we found from looking at up to 44 years’ worth of data, was that having ever used the pill, women are less likely to get colorectal, endometrial and ovarian cancer.
“So the protective benefits from using the pill during their reproductive years are lasting for at least 30 years after women have stopped using the pill.
“We were also interested in what the overall balance of all-types of cancer is amongst women who have used the pill as they enter the later stages of their life. We did not find any evidence of new cancer risks appearing later in life as women get older.
“These results from the longest-running study in the world into oral contraceptive use are reassuring. Specifically, pill users don’t have an overall increased risk of cancer over their lifetime and that the protective effects of some specific cancers last for at least 30 years."
This story was first published in digitalhealth.net
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