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Focusing on the Menopausal Transition to Improve Mid-Life Women's Health

Eligible age

45–55 yrs

Accepts

Women

Locations

1 state

Healthy volunteers

Yes

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About this study

What if midlife women, who are inherently at an increased risk for future cardiometabolic disease due to transitioning into menopause, had access to a suite of evidence-based health interventions? Could these interventions reduce menopause-related inflammation, restore a healthier cardiometabolic profile, reverse epigenetic aging, and reduce bothersome menopausal symptoms? The ultimate goal of this work is to attenuate future disease and enhance women's quality of life, extend healthspan and increase productivity.

Sponsor: University of Colorado, Denver

You may qualify if…

  • aged 45-55
  • In the late menopausal transition, defined as 60 days of amenorrhea but less than 365 days of amenorrhea18
  • No current use of hormone therapy or hormonal contraception
  • Presence of a uterus and at least one ovary in order to track menstrual patterns
  • Have a smartphone and broadband access adequate to accept telehealth appointments

You may not qualify if…

  • Lack of broadband access (activity and survey data will be collected electronically whenever possible and some visits will be via telehealth)
  • Lack of regular menstrual periods in mid-reproductive life (ages 25-38) when not on hormones or not pregnant.
  • Pregnancy or actively trying to get pregnant
  • Inability to adhere to study protocol schedule
  • Untreated alcoholism
  • Un- Diagnosed abnormal uterine bleeding
  • Personal or family history of medullary thyroid cancer or multiple endocrine neoplasia (MEN 2) for participants with a BMI\> 30 kg/m2.

Where it's recruiting

Colorado

Aurora

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · NCT06975111 · last updated 2026-04-30

Focusing on the Menopausal Transition to Improve Mid-Life Women's Heal · TrialPath