Searchable abstracts of presentations at key conferences in endocrinology
Endocrine Abstracts (2010) 22 P129

1Zvezdara University Medical Center, Belgrade, Serbia; 2Medical Faculty, Institute for Medical Statistics, Belgrade, Serbia; 3Sanofi-Aventis, Belgrade, Serbia.


Abdominal obesity and metabolic syndrome are known to increase in prevalence from premenopause to postmenopause in women. Both are well recognized predictors of cardiovascular disease and diabetes in women.

The objective of this study was to assess the presence of obesity and metabolic syndrome during the menopausal transition in women from Serbia.

Methods: Our results present a part of the National epidemiological cross-sectional study (SEMINAR) that assessed the presence of cardiovascular disease and diabetes in Serbia. We evaluated the presence of obesity and metabolic syndrome in 1076 women attending six primary and 14 secondary health care centers in Serbia. Women were divided into 4 groups: premenopausal 35–45 years (n=95), perimenopausal 46–50 years (n=105), early postmenopausal 51–55 years (n=176) and late postmenopausal 56–80 years (n=700). Endocrinologists evaluated 40%, cardiologists 26% and general practitioners 34% of women. Blood glucose, lipids, blood pressure and waist circumference were registered.

Results: Waist circumference over 80 cm was present in 66.3% of premenopausal, 81% of perimenopausal, 81.8% of early and 88.2% of late postmenopausal women (P<0.01 premenopausal to other groups). The mean waist circumference of all women was 92 cm. Mean body mass index (BMI) was 28.5 kg/m2. Premenopausal women had a BMI of 26.9±5.7 kg/m2. It was significantly smaller than the BMI of women in other groups (perimenopausal 28.8±5.6, P<0.05; early 28.6±5.2, P<0.05 and late postmenopausal 31.9±5.7 kg/m2, P<0.0001). Metabolic syndrome was present in 72% of women with a significant difference between premenopausal and other groups (P<0.004). In all, 57.9% of premenopausal, 75.2% of perimenopausal, 77.8% of early and 87.1% of late postmenopausal women had metabolic syndrome.

Conclusion: Women in Serbia that go to doctors mostly have abdominal obesity and metabolic syndrome. The prevalence of obesity and metabolic syndrome significantly increases in the age group 46–50 years. This points to perimenopause as the period of life when preventive measures for diabetes and cardiovascular disease should be undertaken in women.

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