Perimenopause in 2026: why new global research calls for updated diagnostic criteria and improved symptom recognition
Perimenopause in 2026: why new global research calls for updated diagnostic criteria and improved symptom recognition
Perimenopause is one of the most significant physiological transitions in a woman’s life, yet it remains one of the least consistently recognised in clinical practice. In 2025, new evidence is prompting a re-evaluation of how clinicians identify perimenopause, how early symptoms should be interpreted, and why global awareness still lags behind the science.
Large-scale studies from Australia and international cohorts show that many women experiencing clear biological indicators of perimenopause are not being identified as such. This under-recognition contributes to delays in care, misclassification, undertreatment and unnecessary reductions in quality of life. Emerging evidence suggests that the diagnostic frameworks most commonly used today may require updating – shifting from a cycle-first approach to one that places greater emphasis on symptom patterns.
New 2025 evidence: classic symptoms often precede menstrual cycle changes
A landmark Monash University–led study published in The Lancet Diabetes & Endocrinology in 2025 analysed symptom severity in more than 5,500 women aged 40-69.¹
Key findings include:
- Moderate to severe vasomotor symptoms (VMS) – such as hot flushes and night sweats – were nearly five times more prevalent in perimenopause than in premenopause.¹
- Vaginal dryness emerged as a highly specific indicator, occurring 2.5 times more often in perimenopause compared with premenopause.¹
- Symptoms such as low mood or memory concerns were far less discriminative, making them unreliable as standalone markers.
- Many women with regular cycles but changes in flow combined with VMS showed physiological patterns consistent with early perimenopause, despite being classified as premenopausal under the STRAW+10 criteria.¹
This suggests that symptom-first diagnostic cues – particularly VMS and vaginal dryness – may provide earlier and more accurate insight into menopausal transition.
Why the current diagnostic model is under strain
The STRAW+10 framework primarily defines perimenopause through menstrual cycle variability. However, the 2025 evidence clearly demonstrates that hallmark symptoms can emerge well before irregular cycles.¹
This mismatch contributes to:
- Delayed recognition
- Misclassification of perimenopausal women as premenopausal
- Undertreatment of moderate to severe symptoms
- Reduced quality of life during a critical midlife period
As a result, many experts are now advocating for a hybrid diagnostic model that incorporates strong symptom-based indicators alongside menstrual criteria.
The silent burden: nearly 40 per cent of women with VMS remain untreated
The Monash study revealed one of the most concerning statistics:
Almost 40 per cent of perimenopausal women experience untreated VMS.¹
Reasons for this treatment gap include:
- Under-recognition in primary care: Hot flushes, sleep issues or vaginal dryness may be normalised or attributed to stress, ageing or lifestyle.
- Diagnostic ambiguity: Women with regular cycles often assume they are “too young” for perimenopause, delaying care-seeking.
- Limited consultation time: Time constraints in primary care reduce opportunities for comprehensive midlife health assessment.
- Global knowledge gaps: A 2026 international study involving over 17,000 women across 158 countries found significant disconnects between the symptoms women recognise as perimenopausal and the symptoms they actually experience.³
This mismatch makes the global treatment gap measurable – and substantial.
Perimenopause is experienced differently worldwide
The same 2026 dataset identified significant cultural and regional differences in both symptom awareness and symptom interpretation.³
Key contrasts include:
- Hot flushes and sleep disturbances are widely recognised
- Early symptoms such as cycle flow changes or mood variability are often misunderstood or overlooked
- Many women do not realise symptoms can begin in their 30s, leading to delayed recognition across regions³
These insights highlight the need for culturally sensitive public health messaging and improved patient education globally.
Why 2025 marks a turning point in perimenopause research
The growing body of evidence from 2025-2026 reveals several important insights reshaping clinical understanding:
- Symptom-specific markers are stronger than expected
VMS and vaginal dryness clearly differentiate perimenopause from premenopause.¹ - Cycle irregularity is not the earliest or most reliable indicator
Symptoms often emerge before menstrual cycle changes.¹ - Perimenopause may begin earlier in more women than previously recognised
Stable cycles do not rule out biological transition.¹ - The treatment gap is finally quantifiable
Nearly 4 in 10 women experience untreated VMS.¹ - Awareness is not keeping pace with science
Knowledge gaps persist in nearly every global region.³
What this means for clinicians and health communicators
To support women more effectively through this transition, emerging evidence underscores the need for:
- Proactive screening for VMS and vaginal dryness in women aged 40-55
- Symptom-based diagnostic approaches to complement menstrual criteria
- Updated clinical education on early perimenopause recognition
- Clear communication about the wide and variable age range of symptom onset
- Support for women with symptoms despite regular cycles
Perimenopause is not simply a reproductive milestone – it is a critical phase that influences midlife wellbeing and long-term health trajectories.
This content is for educational purposes only and is not a substitute for health professional advice.
References
- Monash University. First of its kind study explores symptom prevalence across the menopause transition. The Lancet Diabetes & Endocrinology. 2025.
https://www.monash.edu/medicine/news/latest/2025-articles/first-of-its-kind-study-explores-symptom-prevalence-across-the-menopause-transition - Islam RM, Bond M, Ghalebeigi A, et al. Prevalence and severity of symptoms across the menopause transition. The Lancet Diabetes & Endocrinology. 2025.
https://www.thelancet.com/journals/landia/article/PIIS2213-8587%2825%2900138-X/abstract - The Menopause Society. International differences exist in knowledge gaps and most common perimenopause symptoms. Menopause. 2026.
https://menopause.org/press-releases/international-differences-exist-in-knowledge-gaps-and-most-common-perimenopause-symptoms
