Menopause Before Age 40 Tied to Higher Heart Disease Risk

Premature Menopause May Raise Lifetime Heart Disease Risk, Study Finds

If you hit menopause before age 40, doctors say you’ve gone through premature menopause — an event that can lead to a range of serious health repercussions that go beyond the loss of fertility.

Now, a new study suggests that women who go through premature menopause may have a 40 percent higher lifetime risk of developing coronary heart disease.

Doctors have known for some time that premature menopause and early menopause (occurring before age 45) can increase the risk of heart disease. But most studies have focused on short-term and mid-term risk, says lead study author Priya Freaney, MD, director of the Women’s Heart Care Program at Northwestern University in Chicago.

“We wanted to understand what this means over the course of a woman’s entire life,” she says. “By looking at lifetime risk, we hoped to better capture the long-term impact of premature menopause on heart health and help inform prevention earlier in life.”