| Literature DB >> 35246240 |
Karen Canfell1, Julia Steinberg1, Sarsha Yap2, Amy Vassallo3,4,5, David E Goldsbury1, Usha Salagame6, Louiza Velentzis1,7, Emily Banks8, Dianne L O'Connell1,9.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Menopausal status impacts risk for many health outcomes. However, factors including hysterectomy without oophorectomy and Menopausal Hormone Therapy (MHT) can mask menopause, affecting reliability of self-reported menopausal status in surveys. We describe a step-by-step algorithm for classifying menopausal status using: directly self-reported menopausal status; MHT use; hysterectomy; oophorectomy; intervention timing; and attained age. We illustrate this approach using the Australian 45 and Up Study cohort (142,973 women aged ≥ 45 years).Entities:
Keywords: 45 and Up Study; Algorithm; Hysterectomy; Menopausal hormone therapy; Menopausal status; Menopause; Oophorectomy
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35246240 PMCID: PMC8895593 DOI: 10.1186/s13104-022-05970-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Res Notes ISSN: 1756-0500
Fig. 1Self-reported menopausal status compared to the detailed derived menopausal status (taking into account interventions that could impact menopause) in the 45 and Up Study (n = 142,973)
Self-reported and consolidated derived menopausal status for women in the 45 and Up Study
| Menopausal status | Post-menopause | Peri-menopause | Pre-menopause | Unknown |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| n (% total; % change compared to self-report) | n (% total; % change compared to self-report) | n (% total; % change compared to self-report) | n (% total; % change compared to self-report) | |
| Self-reported | 93,107 (65.1) | 9,076 (6.4) | 17,930 (12.5) | 22,860 (16.0) |
| Consolidated—reference methoda | 105,817 (74.0%; + 8.9%) | 10,785 (7.5%; + 1.2%) | 15,582 (10.9%; − 1.6%) | 10,789 (7.6%; − 8.4%) |
| Consolidated—conservative methodb | 102,008 (71.4%; + 6.2%) | 10,785 (7.5%; + 1.2%) | 15,582 (10.9%; − 1.6%) | 14,598 (10.2%; − 5.8%) |
| Consolidated—least-conservative methodc | 107,394 (75.1%; + 10.0%) | 10,785 (7.5%; + 1.2%) | 15,582 (10.9%; − 1.6%) | 9,212 (6.4%; − 9.6%) |
| Consolidated—reference method without re-classifying women with detailed “unknown” status | 92,629 (62.7%; − 0.3%) | 10,785 (7.5%; + 1.2%) | 15,582 (10.9%; − 1.6%) | 23,977 (16.8%; + 0.8%) |
| Consolidated—conservative method without re-classifying women with detailed “unknown” status | 89,683 (65.6%; − 2.4%) | 10,785 (7.5%; + 1.2%) | 15,582 (10.9%; − 1.6%) | 26,923 (18.8%; + 2.8%) |
| Consolidated—least-conservative method without re-classifying women with detailed “unknown” status | 93,849 (65.6%; + 0.5%) | 10,785 (7.5%; + 1.2%) | 15,582 (10.9%; − 1.6%) | 22,757 (15.9%; − 0.1%) |
aUnknown or possibly masked status re-classified to “post-menopause” status for women aged ≥ 55 years at baseline
bUnknown or possibly masked status re-classified to “post-menopause” status for women aged ≥ 57 years at baseline
cUnknown or possibly masked status re-classified to “post-menopause” status for women aged ≥ 54 years at baseline
Fig. 2Self-reported menopausal status compared to consolidated derived menopausal status (taking into account interventions that could impact menopause and age at baseline using the reference approach)