Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12105/13877
Title
How do women living with HIV experience menopause? Menopausal symptoms, anxiety and depression according to reproductive age in a multicenter cohort
Author(s)
Suarez-García, Ines | Alejos, Belen ISCIII | Pérez-Elías, Maria-Jesús | Iribarren, Jose-Antonio | Hernando, Asunción | Ramírez, Margarita | Tasias, María | Pascual-Carrasco, Mario ISCIII | Jarrin-Vera, Inmaculada ISCIII | Hernando Sebastian, Victoria ISCIII | CoRIS Cohort
Date issued
2021-05
Citation
BMC Womens Health. 2021 May 28;21(1):223.
Language
Inglés
Abstract
Background: To estimate the prevalence and severity of menopausal symptoms and anxiety/depression and to assess the differences according to menopausal status among women living with HIV aged 45-60 years from the cohort of Spanish HIV/AIDS Research Network (CoRIS). Methods: Women were interviewed by phone between September 2017 and December 2018 to determine whether they had experienced menopausal symptoms and anxiety/depression. The Menopause Rating Scale was used to evaluate the prevalence and severity of symptoms related to menopause in three subscales: somatic, psychologic and urogenital; and the 4-item Patient Health Questionnaire was used for anxiety/depression. Logistic regression models were used to estimate odds ratios (ORs) of association between menopausal status, and other potential risk factors, the presence and severity of somatic, psychological and urogenital symptoms and of anxiety/depression. Results: Of 251 women included, 137 (54.6%) were post-, 70 (27.9%) peri- and 44 (17.5%) pre-menopausal, respectively. Median age of onset menopause was 48 years (IQR 45-50). The proportions of pre-, peri- and post-menopausal women who had experienced any menopausal symptoms were 45.5%, 60.0% and 66.4%, respectively. Both peri- and post-menopause were associated with a higher likelihood of having somatic symptoms (aOR 3.01; 95% CI 1.38-6.55 and 2.63; 1.44-4.81, respectively), while post-menopause increased the likelihood of having psychological (2.16; 1.13-4.14) and urogenital symptoms (2.54; 1.42-4.85). By other hand, post-menopausal women had a statistically significant five-fold increase in the likelihood of presenting severe urogenital symptoms than pre-menopausal women (4.90; 1.74-13.84). No significant differences by menopausal status were found for anxiety/depression. Joint/muscle problems, exhaustion and sleeping disorders were the most commonly reported symptoms among all women. Differences in the prevalences of vaginal dryness (p = 0.002), joint/muscle complaints (p = 0.032), and sweating/flush (p = 0.032) were found among the three groups. Conclusions: Women living with HIV experienced a wide variety of menopausal symptoms, some of them initiated before women had any menstrual irregularity. We found a higher likelihood of somatic symptoms in peri- and post-menopausal women, while a higher likelihood of psychological and urogenital symptoms was found in post-menopausal women. Most somatic symptoms were of low or moderate severity, probably due to the good clinical and immunological situation of these women.
Subject
MESH
Depression | HIV Infections | Anxiety | Anxiety Disorders | Female | Humans | Menopause | Middle Aged
Online version
DOI
Collections
- Investigación > IIS > IIS BIODONOSTIA - Instituto de Investigación Sanitaria Biodonostia (País Vasco) > IIS - Artículos
- Investigación > IIS > i+12 - Instituto de Investigación Hospital 12 de Octubre (Madrid) > IIS - Artículos
- Investigación > IIS > IRYCIS - Instituto Ramón y Cajal de Investigación Sanitaria (Madrid) > IIS - Artículos
- Investigación > ISCIII > Unidad de Investigación en Salud Digital (UITeS) > ISCIII - Artículos
- Investigación > ISCIII > Centro Nacional de Epidemiología (CNE) > ISCIII - Artículos