Age at Menarche and Risk of Hypertensive Disorders of Pregnancy: A Retrospective Cohort Study
Erick Ordoñez-Villordo, Monica Alethia Cureño-Díaz, Erika Gómez-Zamora, Miguel Trujillo-Martínez, Ricardo Castrejón-Salgado, Fani Villa-Rivas, Rocío Castillo-Díaz, Nadia Velázquez-Hernández, Juan Carlos Fernando Sánchez-Velázquez, Ximena Solis-Gómez, José Ángel Hernández-Mariano

TL;DR
This study found that both early and late age at menarche are linked to a higher risk of hypertensive disorders during pregnancy in Mexican women.
Contribution
The study reveals a U-shaped relationship between age at menarche and hypertensive disorders of pregnancy, independent of BMI and gestational diabetes.
Findings
Early (<12 years) and late (>14 years) menarche were associated with increased HDP risk compared to 12–14 years.
The U-shaped association was confirmed using restricted cubic spline models.
Prepregnancy BMI and gestational diabetes explained little of the observed associations.
Abstract
Background/Objectives: Hypertensive disorders of pregnancy (HDP) remain a major contributor to maternal morbidity and mortality worldwide, yet early-life reproductive factors such as age at menarche have been insufficiently explored in relation to HDP. Therefore, we aimed to evaluate the association between age at menarche and the risk of HDP in a cohort of Mexican pregnant women. Methods: We conducted a retrospective cohort study among 1344 women with singleton pregnancies receiving care at a tertiary hospital in Mexico City in 2024. Age at menarche was categorized as <12, 12–14, and >14 years. HDP diagnoses were extracted from clinical records. Poisson regression with robust variance was used to estimate adjusted risk ratios (RRs). Sensitivity analyses included alternative menarche categorizations and restricted cubic spline models. Counterfactual mediation analyses assessed indirect…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPregnancy and preeclampsia studies · Hypothalamic control of reproductive hormones · Growth Hormone and Insulin-like Growth Factors
