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Menopause Symptoms

CURRENT GUIDANCE UPDATE

RCOG 2023

Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT)

HRT remains the most effective treatment for menopause symptoms. For most healthy women under 60 years of age and within 10 years of menopause, the benefits generally outweigh the potential risks.

NICE NG23 (2023)

Managing Vasomotor Symptoms

Hot flashes and night sweats are the primary indications for HRT. Cognitive Behavioural Therapy (CBT) is also recommended as an evidence-based non-hormonal treatment option.

IMS 2023

Timing Hypothesis

Cardiovascular and bone health benefits of HRT are well supported when therapy is initiated within 10 years of menopause, reinforcing the "timing hypothesis."

Clinical Practice

Individualised Treatment

Menopause management should be tailored to each woman's symptoms, medical history, risk profile and personal preferences, with regular review of treatment benefits and risks.

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Introduction

Menopause — the permanent cessation of menstruation following ovarian hormone decline — is a universal life event for women, typically occurring between ages 45 and 55, with an average age of 51. The transition (perimenopause) begins several years before the final menstrual period and can produce significant symptoms affecting daily function, relationships, work performance, and long-term health. Despite this, menopause remains dramatically undertreated — surveys consistently show that the majority of women experiencing significant symptoms have not received adequate medical support.

Managing Menopause Symptoms

Menopause symptoms are primarily caused by declining oestrogen levels. While hot flashes and night sweats are the most recognised features, menopause can affect sleep, mood, cognition, sexual health, bones, skin and cardiovascular wellbeing. Modern treatment focuses on personalised care and evidence-based therapies.

Vasomotor Symptoms

Hot Flashes & Night Sweats

Hot flashes and night sweats affect around 70–80% of women during the menopausal transition. Oestrogen withdrawal alters the hypothalamic thermoregulatory centre, narrowing the body's thermoneutral zone and triggering heat loss responses at lower core temperatures.

Hot flashes and sudden warmth
Night sweats disturbing sleep
Palpitations accompanying episodes
Common Symptoms

The Full Spectrum

Sleep: Insomnia and disrupted sleep
Mood: Anxiety, irritability and low mood
Cognitive: Brain fog and memory difficulties
Genitourinary: Vaginal dryness, urinary urgency and recurrent UTIs
Sexual: Reduced libido and discomfort during intercourse
Musculoskeletal: Joint pain and morning stiffness
Skin & Hair: Dry skin and hair thinning
Long-term: Bone loss and cardiovascular risk changes
Hormone Replacement Therapy

Evidence-Based HRT

HRT remains the most effective treatment for vasomotor symptoms and Genitourinary Syndrome of Menopause. Women starting therapy before age 60 and within 10 years of menopause may gain symptom relief, bone protection and potential cardiovascular benefits.

Combined HRT (oestrogen + progestogen) for women with a uterus
Oestrogen-only HRT after hysterectomy
Transdermal patches, gels and sprays have lower VTE risk than oral therapy
Micronised progesterone and dydrogesterone may have lower breast cancer risk than synthetic progestogens
Non-Hormonal Options

Alternative Treatments

Cognitive Behavioural Therapy (CBT)
SSRIs/SNRIs such as escitalopram and venlafaxine (40–60% reduction in hot flashes)
Gabapentin and pregabalin
Fezolinetant (NK3 receptor antagonist)
Clonidine for modest symptom relief
Mindfulness, yoga and acupuncture with emerging evidence of benefit

Frequently Asked Questions

At what age does menopause start?

The average age of natural menopause is 51. The perimenopause transition begins, on average, 4–6 years before the final period. Menopause before age 40 is defined as premature ovarian insufficiency and requires specialist management.

Is it safe to take HRT after breast cancer?

HRT is generally contraindicated after hormone-receptor-positive breast cancer. This is a complex area, particularly for women with severe symptoms, and decisions should be made with oncological input. Local vaginal oestrogen may be acceptable in some cases.

Conclusion

Menopause symptoms deserve effective clinical management. The tools available — HRT and evidence-based non-hormonal alternatives — are highly effective. Dr. Ruby Rashmi's menopause care programme provides personalised, evidence-based management for every woman navigating this important life transition.

Sources & References

This article draws on guidance current at the time of writing from the following bodies and publications:

  • RCOG (2023 Menopause Position Statement)
  • NICE NG23 (updated 2023)
  • IMS (2023 Global Consensus)

General reference bodies for women's health guidance:

RCOG

rcog.org.uk

ACOG

acog.org

FIGO

figo.org

WHO

who.int

NICE

nice.org.uk

⚠ IMPORTANT DISCLAIMER

This article is provided for general knowledge and reference purposes only. It is not a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. No medication, treatment, or change to your healthcare should be undertaken based on this content without first consulting a qualified doctor. Always seek the advice of your physician or another qualified health provider with any questions you may have regarding a medical condition.

Consult Dr. Ruby Rashmi

Specialist Obstetrician & Gynecologist, Dubai

chatgpt image jun 12, 2026, 02 47 42 pm
Dr. Ruby Rashmi is a highly experienced Specialist Obstetrician & Gynecologist

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