Appy · 7 min
When your cycle stops early, POI
6 sections · 7 min read
Content note
This article discusses premature ovarian insufficiency, including its impact on fertility and early menopause. Some readers may find this diagnosis-adjacent content emotionally difficult.
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What is premature ovarian insufficiency (POI)?
Premature Ovarian Insufficiency (POI) is the medical category for the ovaries slowing down or stopping their usual hormone-and-egg cycle before the age of 40. The clinical pattern is at least four months of irregular or absent periods, plus two raised () blood readings taken about four weeks apart, in someone under 40.
POI is not menopause arrived early, it is its own diagnosis, with its own pathway.
POI is not the same as , even though the symptoms can overlap. is the expected end of the reproductive years, usually around age 51 in the UK. POI is the same physiological territory arriving early, and because it is early, it warrants medical investigation, not just monitoring.
What is POI commonly confused with?
is the run-up to natural : cycle changes, hot flushes, and mood shifts that begin in the 40s (sometimes very late 30s) and last until periods stop for good. It is part of an expected biological transition.
Myth
POI is just early menopause, same thing, different label.
Evidence
POI is a distinct diagnosis, not a synonym for menopause. The label change matters because POI carries its own investigation pathway (FSH retesting, AMH, sometimes karyotype and autoimmune screen), its own long-term considerations (bone density, cardiovascular health, fertility planning), and its own evidence base for HRT, which in POI is given to replace hormones the body would normally still be making, not to manage menopausal symptoms.
ESHRE Guideline on POI 2024; NICE NG23 (2023 update).
What are the symptoms of premature ovarian insufficiency?
The symptoms of POI overlap with : irregular or absent periods, hot flushes, night sweats, mood changes, brain fog, vaginal dryness, lower libido, and disturbed sleep. Some people experience bone or joint aches, dry skin, or thinning hair.
Quick check
Have you experienced cycle changes (irregular or absent periods for four months or more) before age 40?
Why does POI matter differently for South Asian bodies?
Evidence on POI in South Asian populations is small, and we should be honest about that. Most large POI cohorts are predominantly white European. Cautious conclusions are the right ones to draw.
What this does not mean: that SA women are at higher risk of POI in any confirmed way. What it does suggest: if you are under 40 and your symptoms feel real, the appropriate response is investigation, not reassurance based on age averages alone.
What does investigating endometriosis actually involve?
If your doctor is considering POI, the standard initial workup is two blood tests, taken about four weeks apart, both raised, in the menopausal range, before the diagnosis can be made. Oestradiol is usually checked at the same time. () gives a snapshot of and is useful for fertility planning, though it is not part of the formal diagnostic criteria.
For your doctor
I am under 40 and have had irregular or absent periods for four months or more, alongside menopausal-pattern symptoms (hot flushes, night sweats, mood changes, sleep disturbance, vaginal dryness). I would value an investigation for Premature Ovarian Insufficiency in line with NICE NG23 / ESHRE 2024 guidance: two FSH blood tests four weeks apart, oestradiol, and AMH for ovarian reserve assessment. If the FSH pattern supports POI, I would also like to discuss whether karyotype and autoimmune screening are indicated.
What this is for: asking your doctor to start the standard POI workup rather than wait-and-see. The phrasing names the tests so the appointment can move directly to ordering them.
For your doctor
If POI is confirmed on bloods, I would value a referral pathway to a gynaecologist or menopause specialist for: (1) HRT counselling appropriate to POI (replacement-dose, not menopause-management-dose) with discussion of bone and cardiovascular implications; (2) fertility-preservation counselling if relevant; (3) signposting to peer support (Daisy Network) and any psychological support available locally.
What this is for: making sure that if POI is confirmed, the next step is not just a prescription but a proper specialist conversation covering bones, heart, fertility, and support. POI HRT and menopause HRT are not the same, this asks for the right kind.
How do you live with POI and where can you find support?
A POI diagnosis carries weight. It can land on identity, on relationships, on plans for children, and on a sense of one's own body, sometimes all at once. Feeling shocked, sad, or angry on hearing it is a common and reasonable response, not an overreaction.
is the standard medical recommendation in POI, and it is offered for a different reason than in : in POI, hormones are being replaced that the body would normally still be making, with implications for bone density, cardiovascular health, and brain function over the decades ahead. The conversation about belongs with a doctor or specialist who can weigh personal and family history.
Mental-health impact is normal and worth raising. If a diagnosis like this is sitting heavily, that is not weakness, it is the right response to real news. GPs can refer to talking therapies; some specialist clinics include psychological support as standard.
How did this land with you?
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Reviewed by clinicians
Authored and reviewed by clinicians from the founding team. Information only, not personalised medical advice.