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Women's Reproductive Milestones Can Be Risk Factors For Diabetes, High Cholesterol Later In Life: Report

Metabolic health is characterized by optimal blood glucose, lipids, blood pressure, and body fat. Alterations in these characteristics may lead to the development of type 2 diabetes or cardiovascular disease.

  • Screening for reproductive risk factors across the life course may be an initial step to aid prevention or treatment of chronic metabolic diseases
  • Disentangling the relationship between risk factors and metabolic dysfunction is challenging
  • Clinical evidence gathered in the health care setting across the female reproductive lifespan may be critical for implementing prevention strategies

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Women's Reproductive Milestones Can Be Risk Factors For Diabetes, High Cholesterol Later In Life: Report Image by Freepik

Researchers at the Harvard Pilgrim Health Care Institute have conducted a fresh analysis of the current literature, which reveals that female reproductive characteristics may be ignored as risk factors for later metabolic dysfunction. The review, "Reproductive risk factors across the female life course and later metabolic health," was published in Cell Metabolism. Metabolic health is characterized by optimal blood glucose, lipids, blood pressure, and body fat. Alterations in these characteristics may lead to the development of type 2 diabetes or cardiovascular disease.

"Our review provides insights into potential underlying causes and risk factors for poorer metabolic function," said lead author Amy R. Nichols PhD, MS, RD, a research fellow at the Harvard Pilgrim Health Care Institute and the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health. "Current evidence linking certain female reproductive traits to chronic metabolic health and disease suggests that screening for reproductive risk factors across the life course may be an initial step to aid prevention or treatment of chronic metabolic diseases."

These reproductive risk factors include the early age of first menstruation, menstrual irregularity, the development of polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS), high weight change in pregnancy, abnormal blood sugar and lipid levels during pregnancy and the severity and timing of menopausal symptoms. The authors note these traits may share underlying mechanisms leading to poorer metabolic health, including genetic influences, hormonal fluctuations, or body fat. Though acknowledging these reproductive milestones as risk factors is one step toward better understanding the development of metabolic dysfunction, the study teams say future research is needed to understand these complex relationships.

"Disentangling the relationship between risk factors and metabolic dysfunction is challenging," said senior author Emily Oken MD, MPH, Harvard Medical School Professor and Chair of the Department of Population Medicine at the Harvard Pilgrim Health Care Institute. "Clinical evidence gathered in the health care setting across the female reproductive lifespan may be critical for patient education, implementing prevention strategies, and staving off disease onset."

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