J Menopausal Med. 2026 Apr;32(1):1-11. doi: 10.6118/jmm.26008.
ABSTRACT
Menopause is a normative midlife transition characterized by profound endocrine remodeling and a high burden of symptoms and functional change. Accumulating epidemiologic and translational evidence links menopausal transition with shifts in cardiometabolic risk, musculoskeletal health, sleep, mood, and perceived cognitive function. However, most data support association rather than definitive causal acceleration of aging independent of chronological time. This narrative review proposes a menopause-centered healthspan framework that integrates biological, neurocognitive, and psychosocial domains and translates evidence into pragmatic clinical pathway tools. To inform topic selection and prioritize higher-level evidence, including guidelines, randomized trials, meta-analyses, and large cohort studies, a structured evidence scan utilizing PubMed and targeted citation tracking was performed. The evidence scan identified 256 citations. After duplicate removal, titles/abstracts of 162 unique records were reviewed, of which 102 citations informed the final narrative synthesis. The results emphasize that menopausal hormone therapy remains the most effective treatment for vasomotor symptoms and an evidence-based option for reducing fracture risk in appropriate candidates. However, it is not indicated for the primary prevention of cardiovascular disease or dementia. Absolute risks and benefits vary by age, time since menopause, and formulation/route. The neurocognitive section distinguishes common, often transient midlife cognitive complaints from long-term neurodegenerative outcomes, highlighting that menopause is not established as an independent dementia risk factor in the general population. Overall, the framework aims to support individualized, equity-informed care during menopausal transition.
PMID:42045085 | DOI:10.6118/jmm.26008