“…In 1991, when JNM published its last review of the literature on menopausal hormone replacement therapy, it was reported that estrogen use had peaked in 1975, with 28 million prescriptions written in that year for non‐contraceptive estrogens. Subsequently, estrogen usage dropped, following numerous reports in the late 1970s of an association between estrogen therapy and endometrial cancer (5), with a decrease of about 50% in prescriptions written in 1980, compared with 1975 (9). In 1984, however, the National Institutes of Health held a Consensus Conference on Osteoporosis, which strongly recommended estrogen as a preventive measure against this disabling and even fatal condition.…”