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Longitudinal association of vasomotor symptoms and psychosocial outcomes among postmenopausal women in the United States

Authors :
Bradley N Gaynes
Rebekkah Brown
Michele L Jonsson Funk
Kristen B. Van Dole
Robert F. DeVellis
Rachel E. Williams
Source :
Menopause. 17:917-923
Publication Year :
2010
Publisher :
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health), 2010.

Abstract

Objective: Vasomotor and psychosocial symptoms persist as common manifestations of menopause; their explicit association is unclear. We investigated this association among postmenopausal women over a 2-year period. Methods: The Menopause Epidemiology Study is a cross-sectional population-based study of women 40 to 65 years old in the United States. We followed participants who were postmenopausal at baseline and at 2-year follow-up (n = 1,506) in the analyses. The vasomotor and psychosocial domains of the Menopause-Specific Quality of Life Questionnaire were used to assess exposure and outcome. Change in symptoms was defined as the difference in the Menopause-Specific Quality of Life Questionnaire domain score from baseline to follow-up 2 years later. Demographic information, behavioral activities, reproductive history, and medication use were evaluated for effect modification and confounding. Covariate-adjusted linear regression was used to assess the relationship between the change in vasomotor symptoms and change in psychosocial symptoms. Results: One quarter (n = 375) of the women reported an increase in vasomotor symptoms over the 2-year study period. Twenty-two percent of the women reported an increase in both vasomotor and psychosocial symptoms. Current smoking status was found to be an effect modifier: a one-unit increase in the vasomotor domain was associated with a 0.21-unit (95% CI, 0.12-0.29) increase in the psychosocial domain among smokers; this was stronger (0.29, 95% CI, 0.20-0.39) among past or never smokers. Conclusions: This study provides further evidence of an association between vasomotor symptoms and psychosocial symptoms using a validated instrument in a population-based study. There is a small increase in psychosocial symptoms with increasing vasomotor symptoms. Clinicians may want to note this association when treating postmenopausal women with either condition.

Details

ISSN :
10723714
Volume :
17
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Menopause
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....ef2c12e864774138f1d19b196499c6a6