Abstract

STUDY QUESTIONIs the length of FMR1 repeat alleles within the normal range associated with the risk of early menopause?SUMMARY ANSWERThe length of repeat alleles within the normal range does not substantially affect risk of early menopause.WHAT IS KNOWN ALREADYThere is a strong, well-established relationship between length of premutation FMR1 alleles and age at menopause, suggesting that this relationship could continue into the normal range. Within the normal range, there is conflicting evidence; differences in ovarian reserve have been identified with FMR1 repeat allele length, but a recent population-based study did not find any association with age at menopause as a quantitative trait.STUDY DESIGN, SIZE, DURATIONWe analysed cross-sectional baseline survey data collected at recruitment from 2004 to 2010 from a population-based, prospective epidemiological cohort study of >110 000 women to investigate whether repeat allele length was associated with early menopause.PARTICIPANTS/MATERIALS, SETTING, METHODWe included 4333 women from the Breakthrough Generations Study (BGS), of whom 2118 were early menopause cases (menopause under 46 years) and 2215 were controls. We analysed the relationship between length of FMR1 alleles and early menopause using logistic regression with allele length as continuous and categorical variables. We also conducted analyses with the outcome age at menopause as a quantitative trait as well as appropriate sensitivity and exploratory analyses.MAIN RESULTS AND THE ROLE OF CHANCEThere was no association of the shorter or longer FMR1 allele or their combined genotype with the clinically relevant end point of early menopause in our main analysis. Likewise, there were no associations with age at menopause as a quantitative trait in our secondary analysis.LIMITATIONS, REASONS FOR CAUTIONWomen with homozygous alleles in the normal range may have undetected FMR1 premutation alleles, although there was no evidence to suggest this. We estimate minor dilution of risk of early menopause from the likely inclusion of some women with menopause at over 45 years in the early menopause cases due to age-rounding bias in self-reports.WIDER IMPLICATIONS OF THE FINDINGSThere is no robust evidence in this large study that variation within the normal range of FMR1 repeat alleles influences timing of menopause in the general population, which contradicts findings from some earlier, mainly smaller studies. The FMR1 CGG repeat polymorphism in the normal range is unlikely to contribute to genetic susceptibility to early menopause.STUDY FUNDING/COMPETING INTEREST(S)We thank Breast Cancer Now and The Institute of Cancer Research for funding the BGS. The Institute of Cancer Research acknowledges NHS funding to the NIHR Biomedical Research Centre. The study was funded by the Wellcome Trust (grant number 085943). There are no competing interests.TRIAL REGISTRATION NUMBERNot applicable.

Highlights

  • Previous studies have suggested that normal variation in number of CGG repeats in FMR1 could influence age at menopause

  • We found no robust association between normal length FMR1 alleles and early menopause

  • This is similar in size to estimated odds ratios for early menopause (≤45 years) of 1.13–1.85 per allele for common single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in the same study cohort (Murray et al, 2011)

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Summary

Introduction

Previous studies have suggested that normal variation in number of CGG repeats in FMR1 could influence age at menopause. While ovarian function remains normal in women with full mutation range repeat alleles, primary ovarian insufficiency (POI) occurs in 20% of women with alleles in the premutation range of FMR1 (55–200 repeats) (Allen et al, 2014). There is a non-linear relationship between length of premutation alleles that have a dominant genetic effect and age at menopause, with earliest menopause at around 80 copies and later menopause at lower and higher copy numbers (Sullivan et al, 2005; Ennis et al, 2006; Mailick et al, 2014). It has been hypothesised that this relationship with age at menopause may continue to be observed in the range for normal length alleles (

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