“…Two studies did not find an association between hormonal contraceptives and menstrual abnormalities (Muhaidat et al, 2022;Duijster et al, 2023). Other significant associated factors that increased the risk were age (Lee et al, 2022;Morsi et al, 2022;Farah et al, 2023), greater body mass index (Farland et al, 2022), number of children (Muhaidat et al, 2022), marital status (Morsi et al, 2022;Muhaidat et al, 2022), smoking (Alvergne et al, 2023b), education level (Farah et al, 2023), being Hispanic of Latinx (Lee et al, 2022), and high selfreported perceived stress levels (Farland et al, 2022;Bisgaard Jensen et al, 2023). A history of COVID-19 infection decreased the risk in the study by Farland et al (OR = 0.58; 95%CI 0.32-1.04) (Farland et al, 2022), while Alvergne et al and Bisgaard Jensen et al found higher risks for this subgroup (PR = 1.46, 95%CI 1.22-1.75, OR = 2.17, 95%CI 1.40-3.35, respectively) (Alvergne et al, 2023b;Bisgaard Jensen et al, 2023).…”