Early menopause may increase your chance of health problems in your 60s

Embargoed until: Publicly released:

Women who go through 'the change' before they reach their 40s are more likely to experience multiple health problems by the time they reach 60, according to Australian research. The study of more than 5000 Aussie women found that around 7 in 10 women with premature menopause had developed two of more health problems by the age of 60, compared with around 5 in 10 of the women who experienced menopause at the age of 50-51. Health problems included diabetes, heart disease, stroke, arthritis, and breast cancer. The study does not show that premature menopause causes these conditions, only that there is an association. A limitation of the study is that the researchers relied on self-reported information from the women.

Journal/conference: Human Reproduction

Link to research (DOI): 10.1093/humrep/dez259

Organisation/s: The University of Queensland

Funder: The ALSWH was supported by the Australian Government Department of Health. X.X. is funded by an International Postgraduate Research Scholarship from the Australian government and a UQ Centennial Scholarship from The University of Queensland. G.D.M. is supported by the National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC) Principal Research Fellowship (APP1121844).

Media Release

From: The University of Queensland

Premature menopause increases risk of chronic health issues

Women who experience premature menopause are significantly more likely to develop multiple chronic conditions, according to a new study by the University of Queensland.

School of Public Health PhD student Dr Xiaolin Xu analysed data on more than 11 thousand women aged 45 to 50  in 1996 and tracked them until 2016, as part of the Australian Longitudinal Study on Women’s Health.

“The study found premature menopause is linked to a higher chance of women developing individual chronic conditions such as diabetes, heart disease, stroke, osteoporosis, asthma and breast cancer,” Dr Xu said.

He said the research showed 71 per cent of women with premature menopause developed multiple chronic conditions, or multimorbidity, by the time they were 60 years old.

This compared to 55 per cent of women who experienced menopause at the age of 50 to 51.

The data also revealed 45 per cent of women with premature menopause developed multimorbidity during their 60s, compared with 40 per cent of women who experienced menopause at 50 to 51.

“We hope the findings encourage health professionals to consider comprehensive screening and risk assessments for multimorbidity in women experiencing early menopause,” he said.

“Women can make lifestyle changes to slow down the onset of multimorbidity like maintaining a healthy weight range, quitting smoking and doing regular exercise.”

UQ Professor Gita Mishra, senior author on the study, said the national research was the first of its kind in making a connection between premature menopause and multimorbidity in a large group of mid-aged women.

“The life expectancy of women from high-income countries such as Australia is more than 80 years old, meaning one third of a woman’s life comes after menopause,” Professor Mishra said.

“This is another reason why multimorbidity should be considered a clinical and public health priority for controlling and preventing chronic health conditions in women.

Attachments:

Note: Not all attachments are visible to the general public

  • Oxford University Press
    Web page
    Please link to the article in online versions of your report (the URL will go live after the embargo ends).

News for:

Australia
QLD

Media contact details for this story are only visible to registered journalists.