Reid-McCann Rachel, Poli-Neto Omero B, Stein Kate, Dixon Sharon, Cox Emma, Coxon Lydia, Fazel Mina, Noonan MaryAnn, Sharp Gemma C, Zondervan Krina, Vincent Katy
Nuffield Department of Women's and Reproductive Health, John Radcliffe Hospital, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK.
Nuffield Department of Women's and Reproductive Health, John Radcliffe Hospital, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK; Department of Gynaecology and Obstetrics, University of São Paulo, São Paulo, Brazil.
Lancet Child Adolesc Health. 2025 Aug 29. doi: 10.1016/S2352-4642(25)00213-5.
Dysmenorrhoea affects many adolescents and often goes untreated for various sociocultural reasons. Dysmenorrhoea frequently co-occurs with other chronic pain conditions, and adult women with dysmenorrhoea have greater sensory sensitivity compared with controls. We aimed to test the hypothesis that adolescent dysmenorrhoea leads to the development of general chronic pain, including pain outside the pelvis, by estimating the risk of chronic pain in adulthood following the experience of dysmenorrhoea at age 15 years.
We used data from the Avon Longitudinal Study of Parents and Children (ALSPAC) a longitudinal birth cohort of mothers with an expected delivery date between April 1, 1991, and Dec 31, 1992, and their children in Avon, UK. Each year from ages 8 to 17 years, children were asked about dysmenorrhoea. At age 15, participants were also asked to describe their experience of dysmenorrhea as mild, moderate, or severe. At age 26 years, participants reported any pain in response to the questions: "Have you had any aches or pains that have lasted for a day or longer in the past month?" (yes or no); and "When did the pain start?" (<3 months ago or ≥3 months ago). Any chronic pain (≥3 months in duration) was the primary outcome. For the analysis, we excluded participants with a pain condition before menarche and participants with acute pain lasting less than 3 months at age 26 years. Missing data were addressed by multiple imputation. To estimate the risk of chronic pain at age 26 years when experiencing dysmenorrhoea in adolescence (none, mild, moderate, or severe), we used multivariable logistic regression models, adjusted for confounders previously associated with dysmenorrhoea and chronic pain (ethnicity, mother's education level, adverse childhood experiences from ages 0-10 years, depressive symptoms preceding menarche, frequency of vigorous physical activity at menarche, smoking at menarche, polyunsaturated fatty acid intake as per food diaries completed at age 10 years, and BMI at menarche), to generate relative risks [RRs] for chronic pain. Dose response was investigated in an adjusted regression model with dysmenorrhoea severity as a numeric variable. We examined anxiety and depressive symptoms in the 2 years after dysmenorrhoea was reported as potential mediators using bootstrapping with 1000 simulations.
The study sample included 1157 participants, 691 (59·7%) of whom reported moderate or severe dysmenorrhoea at age 15 years. Of the 307 (26·5%) participants who reported chronic pain at age 26 years, 32 (17·3%) had no dysmenorrhoea at age 15 whereas 62 (22·1%) had mild, 157 (30·0%) had moderate, and 56 (33·5%) had severe dysmenorrhoea. Adjusted RRs for any chronic pain at age 26 years were 1·23 (95% CI 0·85-1·74, p=0·27) for mild, 1·65 (1·22-2·18, p=0·0021) for moderate, and 1·76 (1·23-2·39, p=0·0030) for severe dysmenorrhoea at age 15 years compared with no dysmenorrhoea. These findings correspond to an absolute adjusted risk difference of 4·8 percentage points (95% CI -2·5 to 12·1) for mild dysmenorrhoea, 12·7 percentage points (5·9 to 19·4) for moderate dysmenorrhoea, and 16·2 percentage points (7·2 to 25·2) for severe dysmenorrhoea compared with no dysmenorrhea. Anxiety and depressive symptoms mediated a small proportion of the association between severe dysmenorrhoea and chronic pain. The mediating role of anxiety and depressive symptoms was greatest among participants with severe dysmenorrhoea.
Dysmenorrhoea in adolescence adversely affects immediate wellbeing and contributes to an increased risk of chronic pain in adulthood, thus lending supporting evidence to calls to consider adolescent dysmenorrhoea a crucial public health issue. Future work should focus on early identification and effective management, including non-pharmacological strategies and self-management, which relies on continuing work to improve young people's menstrual literacy.
UK Research and Innovation Strategic Priorities Fund Advanced Pain Discovery Platform, a co-funded initiative by UK Research and Innovation (UK Medical Research Council, Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council, and Economic and Social Research Council), Versus Arthritis, the Medical Research Foundation, and Eli Lilly and Company.
痛经影响着许多青少年,由于各种社会文化原因,痛经常常得不到治疗。痛经经常与其他慢性疼痛状况同时出现,与对照组相比,成年痛经女性具有更高的感觉敏感性。我们旨在通过估计15岁经历痛经后成年期慢性疼痛的风险,来检验青少年痛经会导致包括盆腔外疼痛在内的一般性慢性疼痛这一假设。
我们使用了阿冯父母与儿童纵向研究(ALSPAC)的数据,这是一个纵向出生队列研究,研究对象为预产期在1991年4月1日至1992年12月31日之间的英国阿冯地区的母亲及其子女。从8岁到17岁,每年询问孩子们关于痛经的情况。在15岁时,还要求参与者将他们痛经的经历描述为轻度、中度或重度。在26岁时,参与者回答以下问题来报告是否有疼痛:“在过去一个月里,你是否有持续一天或更长时间的疼痛?”(是或否);以及“疼痛什么时候开始的?”(<3个月前或≥三个月前)。任何慢性疼痛(持续时间≥3个月)是主要结局。在分析中,我们排除了月经初潮前有疼痛状况的参与者以及26岁时急性疼痛持续时间少于3个月的参与者。通过多重插补法处理缺失数据。为了估计青少年时期经历痛经(无、轻度、中度或重度)时26岁患慢性疼痛的风险,我们使用多变量逻辑回归模型,对先前与痛经和慢性疼痛相关的混杂因素(种族、母亲的教育水平、0至10岁时的不良童年经历、月经初潮前的抑郁症状、月经初潮时剧烈体育活动的频率、月经初潮时的吸烟情况、根据10岁时填写的食物日记计算的多不饱和脂肪酸摄入量以及月经初潮时的体重指数)进行调整,以生成慢性疼痛的相对风险[RRs]。在一个将痛经严重程度作为数值变量的调整回归模型中研究剂量反应。我们使用1000次模拟的自抽样法,将报告痛经后2年内的焦虑和抑郁症状作为潜在中介因素进行研究。
研究样本包括1157名参与者,其中691名(59.7%)在15岁时报告有中度或重度痛经。在26岁报告有慢性疼痛的307名(26.5%)参与者中,32名(17.3%)在15岁时没有痛经,而62名(22.1%)有轻度痛经,157名(30.0%)有中度痛经,56名(33.5%)有重度痛经。与无痛经相比,15岁时轻度痛经在26岁时患任何慢性疼痛的调整后RR为1.23(95%CI 0.85 - 1.74,p = 0.27),中度痛经为1.65(1.22 - 2.18,p = 0.0021),重度痛经为1.76(1.23 - 2.39,p = 0.0030)。这些结果对应的与无痛经相比,轻度痛经的绝对调整风险差异为4.8个百分点(95%CI -2.5至12.1),中度痛经为12.7个百分点(5.9至19.4),重度痛经为16.2个百分点(7.2至25.2)。焦虑和抑郁症状介导了重度痛经与慢性疼痛之间的一小部分关联。焦虑和抑郁症状的中介作用在重度痛经参与者中最为显著。
青少年痛经对即时幸福感有不利影响,并导致成年后患慢性疼痛的风险增加,因此为呼吁将青少年痛经视为一个关键的公共卫生问题提供了支持性证据。未来的工作应侧重于早期识别和有效管理,包括非药物策略和自我管理,这依赖于持续努力提高年轻人的月经知识水平。
英国研究与创新战略优先基金高级疼痛发现平台,由英国研究与创新(英国医学研究理事会、生物技术与生物科学研究理事会以及经济与社会研究理事会)、对抗关节炎组织、医学研究基金会以及礼来公司共同资助的一项倡议。