# Association Between Hormonal Contraceptive Use and Lipedema: A Cross-Sectional Study With 637 Brazilian Women

**Authors:** Alexandre C Amato, Juliana L Amato, Daniel Benitti

PMC · DOI: 10.7759/cureus.99189 · Cureus · 2025-12-14

## TL;DR

This study found that hormonal contraceptives are often linked to worsened lipedema symptoms in Brazilian women, suggesting personalized counseling is needed.

## Contribution

The study is one of the largest to investigate the association between hormonal contraceptives and lipedema symptom severity in a Brazilian population.

## Key findings

- 58.8% of hormonal contraceptive users reported worsened lipedema symptoms, with 34.5% describing it as severe.
- 15.1% of participants reported symptom onset coinciding with contraceptive initiation.
- Higher baseline symptom scores were the strongest predictor of worsening, not contraceptive duration.

## Abstract

Background: Lipedema is a chronic, progressive adipose tissue disorder that predominantly affects women and is characterized by disproportionate fat accumulation, pain, and edema. Hormonal fluctuations are frequently reported as triggers or modulators of symptoms, but the impact of exogenous hormones, especially hormonal contraceptives, remains poorly defined.

Objective: This study aimed to investigate the association between hormonal contraceptive use and the presence, severity, and self-reported worsening of lipedema symptoms in Brazilian women.

Methods: This observational, cross-sectional study was conducted at Amato - Instituto de Medicina Avançada using a structured online questionnaire applied between August and November 2025. We included women aged 18 years or older, residing in Brazil, with suspected or confirmed lipedema who provided electronic consent and completed core sections on lipedema symptoms, hormonal history, and contraceptive use. Questionnaires with less than 50% of core items answered, duplicate entries, and biologically implausible values were excluded. Symptom (0-8) and quality of life (0-15) scores were calculated. Self-reported changes in symptoms after starting hormonal contraceptives were analyzed as a four-level variable and as a binary worsening variable. Free text on side effects and timing of onset was categorized with natural language processing. Statistical analyses included chi-squared tests, Spearman correlations, and logistic and linear regression.

Results: A total of 637 women were included (mean age 41.8±8.7 years; mean body mass index (BMI) 28.9±6.4 kg/m²); 77.1% had a confirmed diagnosis of lipedema and 92.3% were current or previous users of hormonal contraceptives. Among users, 58.8% reported symptom worsening after starting contraceptives (34.5% severe; 24.3% slight), 40.3% reported no change, and 0.9% reported improvement (p<0.001). Free text analysis showed that 15.1% reported onset of lipedema symptoms temporally coinciding with contraceptive initiation. In multivariable analysis, a higher baseline symptom score was the strongest independent predictor of worsening, while duration of contraceptive use was not associated with risk. Pain intensity and BMI were the main independent predictors of quality of life impact.

Conclusions: In this large sample of Brazilian women with suspected or confirmed lipedema, hormonal contraceptive use was frequently associated with self-reported worsening of symptoms, and a substantial minority reported symptom onset around contraceptive initiation. Women with higher baseline symptom burden appeared particularly vulnerable. These findings support individualized contraceptive counseling for women with lipedema and highlight the need for prospective studies with objective measures to clarify causality and mechanisms.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** lipedema (MONDO:0013577)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (taxon 9606)

## Full text

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## References

68 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12800713/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12800713