Women’s Health: October 2025

Effect of Early Menopause and Hormone Replacement Therapy on Aortic Stenosis Progression

Kathia Abdoun MSc aLionel Tastet PhD a bElisabeth Bédard MD aMarie Arsenault MD aPhilippe Pibarot DVM, PhD aMarie-Annick Clavel DVM, PhD a

a Institut universitaire de cardiologie et de pneumologie de Québec, Université Laval, Québec city, Québec, Canada

b Department of Medicine (Cardiovascular Division), University of California, San Francisco, California, USA

July 2025 (ScienceDirect.com)

Abstract

Background

Early menopause has been associated with several cardiovascular diseases. Its effect on the progression of aortic stenosis (AS) remains unknown. We conducted an analysis to examine the effect of early menopause without hormone replacement therapy (HRT) on the progression of AS in postmenopausal women with AS.

Methods

This subanalysis included 33 female patients with at least mild AS (mean age 65 ± 10 years) who were prospectively enrolled in the Metabolic Determinants of the Progression of Aortic Stenosis (PROGRESSA) study (NCT01679431). Anatomical assessment of AS was performed using multidetector computed tomography, whereas hemodynamic assessment of AS was performed using Doppler echocardiography.

Results

Over a median follow-up of 2 (25th-75th percentiles, 1-4) years, early menopausal women without HRT showed faster progression of aortic valve calcification (AVC; median, 100 [25th-75th percentiles, 58-130] vs 23 [25th-75th percentiles, 2-71] arbitrary units per year; P = 0.03); mean pressure gradient (median, 2.37 [25th-75th percentiles, 0.82-3.61] vs 0.33 [25th-75th percentiles, 0.01-1.78] mm Hg per year; P = 0.04) and aortic valve area indexed to body surface area (median, -0.12 [25th-75th percentiles, -0.23 to 0.002] vs -0.004 [25th-75th percentile, -0.07 to 0.08] cm2/m2/y; P = 0.07). In multivariate analysis adjusted for several clinical, echocardiographic, and anatomic factors, early menopause without HRT remained independently associated with faster AVC progression (P = 0.003). Women who received HRT showed a slower progression of AVC compared with those who never received HRT (median, 62 [25th-75th percentile, 2-100] vs 20 [25th-75th percentile, 10-42] arbitrary units per year; P = 0.13). Multivariate analysis also showed that AVC progressed less rapidly in women who received HRT (P = 0.04).

Conclusions

In this study of postmenopausal women with AS, early menopause without HRT was associated with faster progression of AS, anatomically and hemodynamically. However, the use of HRT was associated with slower progression of AS.

Complete article, illustrations and footnotes: https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0828282X25000947

 

Copyright © 2025 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Inc. on behalf of the Canadian Cardiovascular Society.