A groundbreaking longitudinal study involving nearly 40,000 women offers compelling insights into the intersection of diet, metabolism, and weight regulation during the menopausal transition. This extensive research sheds light on the profound impact that plant-based, low-insulinemic dietary patterns can have in mitigating weight gain and reducing the incidence of obesity amid the complex hormonal and metabolic shifts occurring around menopause. Given that menopause represents a critical and challenging phase in a woman’s life marked by notable endocrine changes, the implications of these findings hold extraordinary significance for women’s health globally.
Menopause induces a cascade of hormonal alterations, notably a decrease in estrogen, which precipitates metabolic changes including insulin resistance, altered fat distribution, and reduced energy expenditure. Consequently, many women experience accelerated weight gain and are predisposed to obesity, which in turn amplifies risk for cardiometabolic diseases such as type 2 diabetes and cardiovascular disorders. Despite general awareness about the role of diet in health maintenance, there remains a dearth of rigorous evidence pinpointing the optimal dietary composition that best supports healthy weight trajectory during this pivotal midlife period.
Addressing this critical gap, researchers from the joint NUS–Harvard Women’s Health Initiative (NUSHINE) undertook a comprehensive comparative analysis of eleven distinct dietary patterns. By leveraging data from the Nurses’ Health Study II, which captured dietary habits and weight measurements of 38,283 women over a span extending approximately 12 years surrounding menopause (1989–2019), this work represents one of the largest and most robust investigations focused on diet and weight dynamics in menopausal women. The cohort predominantly included Caucasian participants, with ongoing plans to extend analyses into more ethnically diverse populations, including Asians.
Dietary intake was meticulously tracked every four years through validated food frequency questionnaires, permitting detailed correlations between dietary patterns and incremental weight changes observed during six consecutive two-year intervals. This design enabled an unprecedented evaluation of how specific nutrient profiles and food choices influence body weight regulation amid the metabolic adaptations of menopause. Of particular interest was the examination of “insulinemic potential,” a measure reflecting the propensity of foods to stimulate insulin secretion, a hormone integral to glucose metabolism and adipose tissue accumulation.
Women on average gained approximately 0.8 kilograms annually throughout the follow-up period. Notably, 5,214 participants developed obesity—a condition defined by excessive fat accumulation posing health risks—across more than 340,000 participant-years of cumulative observation. The study’s findings highlighted the Planetary Health Diet Index as the most protective dietary pattern against obesity. This index emphasizes consumption of plant-based foods rich in fiber, essential micronutrients, and bioactive compounds, including nuts, legumes, whole grains, fruits, and vegetables. Women whose diets closely adhered to this pattern exhibited a remarkable 54% reduction in obesity risk compared to those whose diets scored lowest on this index.
In tandem, the reverse Empirical Dietary Index for Hyperinsulinemia (rEDIH) emerged as the dietary pattern associated with the most substantial attenuation of annual weight gain. This index represents a diet with low insulinemic potential, characterized by minimal consumption of red and processed meats, fried foods such as French fries, potatoes, and excessive sodium. Participants following this low-insulinemic diet trajectory gained 0.28 kilograms less per year relative to those with diets exerting higher insulinogenic responses. These findings underscore the critical role of moderating insulin secretion through dietary choices to curb menopausal weight gain.
Conversely, consumption of diets rich in ultra-processed food items, including red and processed meats, fried potatoes, and excessive salt, was robustly linked to accelerated weight gain and notably elevated obesity risk. Women adhering to high-insulinemic diets exhibited nearly a twofold increased likelihood of developing obesity, reinforcing the detrimental role that processed and energy-dense foods play during hormonal transitions. This pattern of intake likely exacerbates insulin secretion and promotes adiposity via several metabolic pathways, including chronic low-grade inflammation and impaired glucose homeostasis.
The elucidation of these relationships points toward practical and actionable dietary guidance with potentially transformative public health implications. Transitioning to a plant-forward, low-insulinemic diet—emphasizing whole grains, legumes, nuts, and abundant fruits and vegetables—can serve as a straightforward yet effective approach for women striving to mitigate metabolic risk factors during menopause without necessitating radical lifestyle changes. Importantly, this form of dietary modulation aligns with broader sustainability goals, given the emphasis on plant-based nutrient sources.
Professor Zhang Cuilin of the NUS Yong Loo Lin School of Medicine and co-lead of the study articulates the hopeful narrative: adopting these nutritional strategies requires minimal upheaval, and when integrated into standard midlife clinical care, they can significantly reduce the long-term health burden posed by obesity and cardiometabolic diseases. This underscores the potential for dietary interventions as a cornerstone in preventive medicine throughout one of the most metabolically transformative phases in a woman’s life.
Professor Frank B. Hu of Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health further highlights the timeliness of the findings amid a global surge in obesity prevalence and cardiometabolic disorders among midlife women. Their research advocates for incorporating evidence-based dietary counseling into routine healthcare services targeted at women undergoing menopausal transition as a critical step in safeguarding long-term health trajectories and alleviating chronic disease burden.
Future investigative efforts are anticipated to expand the diversity of participant populations, emphasizing underrepresented groups, notably Asian women, to ascertain the applicability and nuance of these findings across different ethnic and genetic backgrounds. Moreover, clinical trials exploring targeted nutritional interventions aimed explicitly at ameliorating metabolic health during menopause stand to refine and validate these observational insights, potentially reshaping dietary guidelines and health policy aimed at this demographic.
This NUS–Harvard collaborative endeavor through NUSHINE exemplifies the power of international partnership in addressing urgent healthcare challenges, with the promise of generating evidence that transcends regional boundaries. The intriguing link between insulin dynamics, dietary components, and menopause-associated weight gain uncovered by this research offers fertile ground for future studies seeking to elucidate mechanistic pathways and optimize personalized nutritional interventions.
In conclusion, the study compellingly endorses a paradigm shift towards prioritizing plant-based, low-insulinemic dietary patterns during menopause to combat undesirable weight increases and mitigate obesity risk. By centering on whole foods rich in fiber and essential nutrients, and minimizing intake of highly processed, insulinogenic foods, midlife women can actively modulate their metabolic fate with profound implications for healthspan and quality of life.
Subject of Research: Dietary patterns and their association with weight gain and obesity risk during menopause.
Article Title: Optimal Dietary Patterns for Lower Weight Gain and Risk of Obesity Surrounding Menopause
News Publication Date: 20-May-2026
Web References:
https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jamanetworkopen/fullarticle/2849168#251015716
http://dx.doi.org/10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2026.13102
References:
NUS–Harvard Women’s Health Initiative (NUSHINE), Nurses’ Health Study II cohort data (1989–2019). JAMA Network Open Publication, 2026.
Keywords: menopause, obesity, weight gain, plant-based diet, low-insulinemic diet, dietary patterns, cardiometabolic health, metabolic transition, insulin, processed food, epidemiology, women’s health

