Associations of Early Prolonged Secondary Amenorrhea in Women With and Without HIV

  • Women's Hospital ROR
  • University of British Columbia ROR
  • Simon Fraser University ROR
  • Women's Health Research Institute, H214-4500 Oak St, Vancouver, British Columbia V6H 3N1, Canada; Department of Pathology & Laboratory Medicine, University of British Columbia, Rm. G227 - 2211 Wesb... ROR
  • Women's College Hospital ROR
  • Vancouver Hospital and Health Sciences Centre ROR

Open forum infectious diseases, 11(9), ofae493

DOI 10.1093/ofid/ofae493 PMID 39301109

Abstract

Background

The menstrual cycle is a critical indicator of women's health. Early prolonged secondary amenorrhea increases risks for morbidity and mortality. Menstrual cycle research in women with HIV is inconsistent and often lacks an adequate comparison sample. We aimed to determine whether women with HIV have a higher lifetime prevalence of amenorrhea and whether this is independently associated with HIV and/or other biopsychosocial variables.

Methods

With data from 2 established HIV cohorts, participants assigned female at birth were eligible if aged ≥16 years, not pregnant/lactating, and without anorexia/bulimia nervosa history. Amenorrhea was defined by self-reported history of (1) no menstrual flow for ≥12 months postmenarche not due to pregnancy/lactation, medications, or surgery or (2) early menopause or premature ovarian insufficiency. Multivariable logistic regression models explored biopsychosocial covariates of amenorrhea.

Results

Overall, 317 women with HIV (median age, 47.5 years [IQR, 39.2-56.4]) and 420 women without HIV (46.2 [32.6-57.2]) were included. Lifetime amenorrhea was significantly more prevalent among women with HIV than women without HIV (24.0% vs 13.3%). In the multivariable analysis, independent covariates of amenorrhea included HIV (adjusted odds ratio, 1.70 [95% CI, 1.10-2.64]), older age (1.01 [1.00-1.04]), White ethnicity (1.92 [1.24-3.03]), substance use history (6.41 [3.75-11.1]), and current food insecurity (2.03 [1.13-3.61]).

Conclusions

Nearly one-quarter of women with HIV have experienced amenorrhea, and this is associated with modifiable risk factors, including substance use and food insecurity. Care providers should regularly assess women's menstrual health and advocate for actionable sociostructural change to mitigate risks.

Topics

secondary amenorrhea HIV women prolonged early associations, HIV amenorrhea menstrual dysfunction immune status, Swann King Prior amenorrhea women living with HIV, menstrual irregularity HIV antiretroviral therapy, early prolonged amenorrhea HIV CD4 viral load, reproductive health women HIV menstrual function, Open Forum Infectious Diseases amenorrhea HIV 2024, HIV treatment menstrual cycle disruption risk factors, Kaida Loutfy HIV women menstrual health
PMID 39301109 39301109 DOI 10.1093/ofid/ofae493 10.1093/ofid/ofae493

Cite this article

Swann, S. A., King, E. M., Pang, D., Silva, M. A. P., Campbell, A. R., Prior, J. C., Loutfy, M., Kaida, A., Côté, H. C. F., & Murray, M. C. M. (2024). Associations of Early Prolonged Secondary Amenorrhea in Women With and Without HIV. *Open forum infectious diseases*, *11*(9), ofae493. https://doi.org/10.1093/ofid/ofae493

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