4.4 Article

Daily salivary cortisol patterns in midlife women with hot flashes

Journal

CLINICAL ENDOCRINOLOGY
Volume 84, Issue 5, Pages 672-679

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/cen.12995

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Institute of Aging (NIA)
  2. Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Development (NICHD)
  3. National Center for Complementary and Alternative Medicine (NCCAM)
  4. Office of Research and Women's Health (ORWH)
  5. NIA [U01 AG032656, U01AG032659, U01AG032669, U01AG032682, U01AG032699, U01AG032700]
  6. Indiana Clinical and Translational Sciences Institute
  7. National Institutes of Health, National Center for Research Resources, Clinical and Translational Sciences Award [UL1 RR025761]

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ObjectiveDiurnal salivary cortisol patterns in healthy adults are well established but have not been studied in midlife women with hot flashes. We hypothesized that frequent hot flashes areassociated with aberrant cortisol patterns similar to sleep-deficient individuals. DesignCross-sectional. ParticipantsA total of 306 women, ages 40-62, randomized to a behavioural intervention for hot flashes. MeasurementsBaseline comparisons of cortisol geometric means (nmol/l) from four daily time points averaged over two consecutive days plus other calculated cortisol measures were made between groups defined by baseline: (i) mean daily hot flash frequency tertile (55, N=103; >55-88, N=103; >88, N=100) and (ii) selected characteristics. Repeated-measures linear regression models of log-transformed cortisol evaluated group differences, adjusting for covariates. ResultsWomen were 67% White and 24% African American, with 76 (SD 39) hot flashes per day. Salivary cortisol geometric means (nmol/l) among all women were as follows: 750 (SD 448) total, 86 (SD 56) wake, 100 (SD 75) wake +30min, 37 (SD 33) early afternoon and 16 (SD 18) bedtime. Wake+30-minute values showed an 18% median rise from wake values (interquartile range -24 to 96%), and means varied by hot flash frequency tertile, from lowest to highest: 114(SD 73), 103 (SD 65) and 86 (SD 78), respectively, P=0003. Beside the early afternoon value (P=002), cortisol values did not vary by hot flash frequency. ConclusionTaken together, these findings suggest that high frequency of moderate-to-severe hot flashes may be associated with subtle abnormalities in cortisol concentrations - a pattern consistent with chronic sleep disturbance.

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