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. 2022 May-Jun;16(3):235-241.
doi: 10.1016/j.orcp.2022.04.002. Epub 2022 Apr 14.

Body mass index and the diagnosis of endometriosis: Findings from a national data linkage cohort study

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Body mass index and the diagnosis of endometriosis: Findings from a national data linkage cohort study

Ingrid J Rowlands et al. Obes Res Clin Pract. 2022 May-Jun.

Abstract

Background: Women with lower body mass index (BMI) have a higher risk of surgically confirmed endometriosis but this finding runs counterintuitive to the oestrogen-dependent theory for the disease. Increasingly, endometriosis is diagnosed via non-surgical methods. We examined BMI at age 18-23 years, and changes in BMI, and the risk of endometriosis according to the diagnostic method.

Methods: We analysed data from 11 794 young women, born in 1989-95, who completed six surveys as part of an Australian, longitudinal cohort study between 2013 and 2018. Women's survey responses were linked to administrative health records to identify endometriosis. Cox proportional hazards models modelled associations between BMI at age 18-23 years, and changes in BMI, and endometriosis. Analyses were stratified by the diagnostic method of endometriosis: clinically confirmed endometriosis (based on hospital discharge diagnosis) versus clinically suspected endometriosis (women's reports of physician-diagnosed endometriosis).

Results: There were 223 cases of clinically confirmed endometriosis and 396 cases of clinically suspected endometriosis. Women who gained weight after age 18-23 had lower risk of clinically confirmed endometriosis than women without endometriosis whose weight remained stable (HR = 0.64, 95% CI = 0.47-0.88). Women who were overweight (HR = 1.29, 95% CI = 1.01-1.66) at age 18-23 had higher risk of clinically suspected endometriosis than women of normal weight without endometriosis.

Conclusions: The risk of clinically confirmed endometriosis was lower among women who gained weight compared to women with stable weight. The risk of clinically suspected endometriosis was higher among women who were overweight compared to normal weight.

Keywords: Body mass index; Cohort study; Endometriosis; Obesity; Weight change.

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