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Early Onset Perimenopause: Before 40 — Causes, Risks, and Management

Last updated: March 21, 2026

TLDR

Perimenopause before 40 affects approximately 1-5% of women. Before 40, early perimenopause may indicate primary ovarian insufficiency (POI). It carries distinct health implications: longer estrogen deficiency means higher long-term bone and cardiovascular risk. HRT is recommended not just for symptom relief but for health protection.

DEFINITION

Primary ovarian insufficiency (POI)
Reduced or absent ovarian function before age 40, confirmed by elevated FSH (above 25-40 IU/L, depending on laboratory) on two tests at least 4 weeks apart. Affects approximately 1% of women. Different from natural early menopause — ovarian function may fluctuate, and sporadic ovulation and even pregnancy can still occur.

DEFINITION

Early menopause
Menopause (12 consecutive months without a period) occurring before age 45. Early perimenopause leads to early menopause. The distinction from POI relates to whether ovarian failure is confirmed and permanent versus fluctuating.

What Early Onset Means Clinically

Perimenopause starting before 40 carries different clinical significance than perimenopause at 45-50. The primary difference is duration of estrogen deficiency.

A woman who reaches menopause at 38 will have approximately 13 more years of low estrogen before reaching the average menopause age of 51 — and potentially 40+ years of post-menopausal estrogen deficiency. Compared to the woman who reaches menopause at 51, this represents substantially higher lifetime cumulative risk for osteoporosis fractures, cardiovascular events, and — in some research — cognitive decline.

This is why the clinical approach to early perimenopause is different from management at the typical age.

Causes Worth Investigating

Unlike perimenopause at 45, early perimenopause in a 37-year-old warrants investigation for underlying causes:

Autoimmune: Autoimmune oophoritis (immune attack on ovarian tissue) is one of the more common identified causes of POI. It may occur alongside other autoimmune conditions.

Genetic: Family history of early menopause increases risk. The fragile X premutation (FMR1 gene) is associated with POI; genetic testing is recommended when POI is confirmed, both for the woman and because of implications for female relatives.

Iatrogenic: Chemotherapy and radiation — particularly pelvic radiation — can damage ovarian function. Surgical bilateral oophorectomy causes immediate surgical menopause.

Idiopathic: In many cases, no cause is found.

Management at This Age

HRT for health protection: At under 40, HRT is not optional for women with confirmed POI — it is recommended for bone and cardiovascular protection. The dose may be higher than standard menopause doses to match what the body should naturally be producing.

Bone density monitoring: DEXA scan at diagnosis, with follow-up monitoring.

Fertility discussion: If pregnancy is desired, referral to a reproductive endocrinologist promptly.

Genetic counseling: If no specific cause is identified and family history is concerning, genetic counseling regarding FMR1 testing is appropriate.

Q&A

What causes early onset perimenopause?

Causes include genetic factors (family history of early menopause, fragile X premutation, chromosomal variants), autoimmune conditions (autoimmune destruction of ovarian tissue is one of the most common causes), prior cancer treatment (chemotherapy and radiation can damage ovarian function), and surgical removal of ovaries. In many cases, no specific cause is identified.

Q&A

How is early onset perimenopause diagnosed?

For women under 40 with symptoms consistent with perimenopause, testing includes FSH (elevated) and estradiol (low), ideally repeated twice at least 4 weeks apart to account for fluctuation. AMH (anti-Mullerian hormone) reflects ovarian reserve and is often low. Autoimmune markers may be checked. The diagnosis requires clinical evaluation — not just lab values.

Q&A

What are the health risks of early perimenopause?

Early perimenopause means a longer period of low estrogen. Estrogen protects bone density and cardiovascular health. Women who reach menopause before 45 have higher lifetime risk of osteoporosis and cardiovascular disease compared to those who reach menopause at the average age. This is why HRT is recommended for health protection — not just symptom relief — in women with early perimenopause or POI.

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Can I still get pregnant with early onset perimenopause?
Possibly. In POI, ovarian function is reduced but may be intermittent — occasional ovulation can still occur. Spontaneous pregnancy rates are approximately 5-10% for women with POI. For women who wish to conceive, referral to a reproductive endocrinologist is important, as options and timing are complex.
Is HRT required for early perimenopause or just optional?
For women under 40 with confirmed early perimenopause or POI, current clinical guidelines (including NICE in the UK and the Menopause Society in the US) recommend HRT (or combined oral contraceptives if contraception is also needed) for bone and cardiovascular protection — not just symptom relief. The risk-benefit calculation is clearly in favor of treatment at this age.
What conditions are associated with early perimenopause?
Early perimenopause is associated with autoimmune thyroid disease (Hashimoto's), type 1 diabetes, other autoimmune conditions, and adrenal insufficiency. Genetic conditions including fragile X premutation and Turner syndrome variants are also associated. Screening for associated conditions is appropriate when POI is diagnosed.

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