Early menopause increases health risks after 60: study

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PARIS, Jan 20, 2020 (BSS/AFP) – Women who undergo premature menopause are
almost three times more likely to develop multiple, chronic medical problems
in their sixties than women who make the transition at 50 or 51, researchers
reported Monday.

In high-income countries, a third of a woman’s life unfolds after the
menopause.

Earlier research showed that premature menopause at 40 or younger is
linked later in life to single medical problems such as cardiovascular
disease and diabetes.

But the new study, published in Human Reproduction, is the first to
examine links between the timing of natural menopause and the onset of
multiple medical conditions, known as multimorbidity, the authors said.

The data were drawn from more than 5,100 women enrolled in an Australian
national health survey.

The women reported at three-year intervals from 1996 to 2016 on whether
they had been diagnosed with any of 11 health problems, including diabetes,
high blood pressure, heart disease, stroke, arthritis, osteoporosis, asthma,
depression, anxiety or breast cancer.

Multimorbidity was defined as having two or more of these conditions at
the same time.

The women were considered to have entered natural menopause after 12
months without monthly periods.

During the 20-year follow-up, more than half of the 2.3 percent of women
who experienced premature menopause also developed multimorbidity.

Compared with women who experienced menopause at the age of 50-51 years,
they were twice as likely to develop multimorbidity by the age of 60, and
three times more likely to experience it after 60.

“Forty-five percent of women with premature menopause had developed
multimorbidity in their 60s compared with 40 percent of women who experienced
menopause at the age of 50-51,” said co-author Xiaolin Xu, a research
professor at China’s Zhejiang University.

The study does not show that premature menopause causes the development of
multimorbidity, only that there is a strong correlation, the authors noted.

“Our findings indicate that multimorbidity is common in mid-aged and
early-elderly women,” said senior author Gita Mishra, director of the Centre
for Longitudinal and Life Course Research at the University of Queensland,
Brisbane.

“Premature menopause is associated with an increased risk of developing
multimorbidity, even after adjusting for previous chronic conditions.”

Number of children, level of education, body mass index, tobacco
consumption, and physical activity were also taken into account.

Health professionals should consider providing comprehensive screening and
assessment of risk factors when treating women who experience natural
premature menopause, the authors recommended.