Abstract

ObjectiveWe determined whether simple, clinical information on late and early menarche could help identify adult women with metabolic syndrome (MetS) and oligomenorrhea. Materials/MethodsWe carried out a 26-year prospective follow-up of 272 suburban schoolgirls from ages 5–22 to 30–46. ResultsEarly menarche (≤10years, 5.2% of girls) and late menarche (≥16years, 6.7% of girls) were both associated with oligomenorrhea (≥42days) in adulthood, 29% and 11%, vs. 5% for normal menarche (11–15years), p=.004. Early menarche was characterized by high childhood BMI (LS mean±SE: 21.2 ±1.0kg/m2) and by high childhood and adult MetS (15%, 36%). Girls with late menarche had the lowest childhood BMI (18.1±1.0), no childhood MetS, and the highest adult MetS (47%). Increasing age at menarche was associated with uniformly decreasing childhood BMI and MetS, but with a U-shaped pattern of BMI (p = .05), MetS (p=.008), and oligomenorrhea (p=.02) in adulthood. Change to MetS from median ages 13 to 38 was associated with early–late menarche (OR=3.11, 95% CI 1.37–7.07, p=.007). MetS in adulthood was associated with childhood MetS (OR=8.03, 95% CI 2.57–25.08, p=.0003) and with early–late menarche (OR =3.43, 95% CI 1.44–8.15, p=.005). ConclusionsMenarche age had a curvilinear (‘U’ shaped) relationship with MetS and oligomenorrhea in adulthood. Late menarche and early menarche are risk factors for adult oligomenorrhea, MetS, and cardiometabolic abnormalities. Girls with early (≤ age 10) and with late menarche (≥ 16) represent a group at high risk for adult cardiometabolic abnormalities and oligomenorrhea that is easily identifiable by physicians.

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