Menopause and Gut Health: The Estrobolome Connection
Your gut bacteria help regulate your oestrogen levels. A specialised collection of gut microbes, collectively known as the estrobolome, produces enzymes that metabolise and recycle oestrogen in the body. When the gut microbiome is disrupted, oestrogen metabolism changes, and this can amplify the symptoms of menopause. The relationship also works in reverse: declining oestrogen during menopause alters the gut microbiome itself, creating a cycle that affects both hormonal balance and digestive health.
This bidirectional gut-hormone connection is one of the most active areas of menopause research, and it is reshaping how scientists and clinicians think about both digestive symptoms and hormonal health during the menopausal transition.
What is the estrobolome?
The term "estrobolome" was introduced in the scientific literature to describe the aggregate of enteric bacterial genes capable of metabolising oestrogens. In simpler terms, it is the subset of your gut bacteria that can process oestrogen.
Here is how the oestrogen recycling process works:
- The liver metabolises oestrogen and sends it to the gut through bile for excretion.
- In the gut, estrobolome bacteria produce an enzyme called beta-glucuronidase, which deconjugates (reactivates) the oestrogen.
- This reactivated oestrogen is then reabsorbed into the bloodstream through the intestinal wall.
- The reabsorbed oestrogen circulates through the body, binding to oestrogen receptors in various tissues.
When the estrobolome is healthy and diverse, this recycling system maintains appropriate oestrogen levels. When the gut microbiome is disrupted (a state called dysbiosis), the estrobolome can either under-produce or over-produce beta-glucuronidase, leading to either too little or too much circulating oestrogen.
of the immune system resides in the gut, making it a critical intersection point for hormonal, immune, and metabolic health
Source: Published immunology research on gut-associated lymphoid tissue (GALT)
The two-way relationship: menopause changes the gut, the gut changes menopause
How oestrogen decline affects the microbiome
Oestrogen receptors are present throughout the gastrointestinal tract, and oestrogen plays a role in maintaining the integrity of the intestinal barrier (the "gut lining"), regulating immune function in the gut, and influencing the composition of the microbiome itself.
Published research has documented several ways that declining oestrogen during menopause affects gut health:
- Reduced microbial diversity: Studies comparing premenopausal and postmenopausal women have found that postmenopausal women tend to have lower gut microbial diversity, a key marker of gut health. The gut microbiome of postmenopausal women more closely resembles that of men of the same age, suggesting that oestrogen plays a role in maintaining the female-specific microbiome composition.
- Increased intestinal permeability: Oestrogen helps maintain tight junctions between intestinal cells. As oestrogen declines, the gut barrier may become more permeable (sometimes referred to as "leaky gut"), allowing bacterial products and food particles to trigger immune responses.
- Altered immune regulation: The gut immune system is modulated by oestrogen. Changes in oestrogen levels can shift the balance between inflammatory and anti-inflammatory immune responses in the gut.
- Changes in motility: Oestrogen and progesterone both influence gastrointestinal motility. Hormonal fluctuations during perimenopause can contribute to alternating constipation and diarrhoea, bloating, and other motility-related symptoms.
How gut health affects hormonal balance
The reverse pathway is equally important. When estrobolome function is impaired due to gut dysbiosis, less oestrogen is recycled back into circulation. During perimenopause and menopause, when ovarian oestrogen production is already declining, impaired estrobolome function can further reduce available oestrogen, potentially worsening menopausal symptoms.
Conversely, an estrobolome that is overactive (producing too much beta-glucuronidase) can result in higher-than-expected circulating oestrogen. This may contribute to oestrogen-dominant symptoms that some women experience during perimenopause, including heavy bleeding, breast tenderness, and mood changes.
Digestive symptoms during menopause
Gastrointestinal symptoms are surprisingly common during the menopausal transition, yet they are among the least discussed. Research suggests that a significant proportion of perimenopausal and postmenopausal women experience new or worsening digestive symptoms:
Many women report that these symptoms emerge or worsen during perimenopause, and they are frequently evaluated and treated as standalone gastrointestinal conditions without consideration of the hormonal context.
Recent research: microbiome and menopausal symptoms
Large-scale microbiome research programmes have begun specifically examining the relationship between gut health and menopausal symptoms. In early 2025, researchers from the ZOE health science programme (based in the UK) published findings from a study linking gut microbiome composition to menopausal symptom severity. Their data, drawn from a large participant cohort, suggested that specific gut bacterial signatures were associated with the presence and severity of common menopausal symptoms, including hot flushes, mood changes, and metabolic dysfunction.
While this research is still in early stages, the findings are consistent with the growing body of evidence suggesting that the microbiome is not merely a passive bystander during the menopausal transition but an active participant that can either buffer or amplify the effects of hormonal changes.
Other research groups have reported similar findings. Studies have identified specific bacterial genera that appear to be associated with better or worse menopausal outcomes, though the specific organisms and mechanisms are still being characterised.
approximately 100 trillion microorganisms inhabit the human gut, collectively containing more genes than the human genome
Source: Published microbiome research, Human Microbiome Project data
What supports gut health during menopause
Dietary fibre
Fibre is the primary fuel for beneficial gut bacteria. Prebiotic fibres (found in garlic, onions, leeks, asparagus, bananas, oats, and legumes) specifically feed the bacterial species associated with a healthy estrobolome. Published research consistently shows that higher fibre intake is associated with greater microbial diversity and better oestrogen metabolism.
Most adults consume well below the recommended 30 grams of fibre per day (as recommended by the NHS). Increasing fibre intake gradually is one of the most evidence-supported strategies for improving gut health.
Polyphenol-rich foods
Polyphenols (found in berries, dark chocolate, green tea, olive oil, and red/purple vegetables) have prebiotic effects and also provide direct antioxidant and anti-inflammatory benefits in the gut. Research suggests that polyphenols can positively modulate gut microbiome composition and support oestrogen metabolism.
Fermented foods
Fermented foods (yoghurt, kefir, kimchi, sauerkraut, miso) introduce beneficial bacteria directly into the gut. A published study from Stanford University found that a diet high in fermented foods increased microbial diversity and reduced markers of inflammation over a 10-week period. For menopausal women, this dual benefit (more diverse microbiome + reduced inflammation) is particularly relevant.
Probiotics
The evidence on probiotic supplementation for menopause-specific outcomes is still developing, but several areas show promise:
- Bone health: A randomised controlled trial published in a major medical journal found that supplementation with Lactobacillus reuteri reduced bone loss in older women over 12 months compared to placebo.
- Vaginal health: Specific Lactobacillus strains have been shown to support vaginal microbiome health, which is affected by oestrogen decline.
- Metabolic markers: Some probiotic strains have been associated with improvements in insulin sensitivity and cholesterol levels in postmenopausal women in small studies.
- Mood: The gut-brain axis is well-established, and certain probiotic strains (sometimes called "psychobiotics") have shown modest effects on mood and anxiety in clinical trials, though not specifically in menopausal populations.
Limiting microbiome disruptors
Several common factors can negatively affect the gut microbiome, and awareness of these is important during the menopausal transition:
- Unnecessary antibiotics: Antibiotics can dramatically reduce microbial diversity. When antibiotics are medically necessary, consider probiotic support during and after the course.
- Ultra-processed foods: High in emulsifiers, artificial sweeteners, and preservatives that research has linked to gut dysbiosis and increased intestinal permeability.
- Chronic stress: The gut-brain axis works both ways. Chronic stress alters gut microbiome composition and increases intestinal permeability.
- Excessive alcohol: Alcohol disrupts the gut barrier and alters microbiome composition.
- NSAIDs: Non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, when used frequently, can damage the intestinal lining and alter the microbiome.
The gut-brain-hormone axis in menopause
One of the most fascinating aspects of the gut-menopause connection is the three-way communication between the gut, the brain, and the hormonal system. The gut microbiome produces neurotransmitters (including approximately 95% of the body's serotonin), short-chain fatty acids that influence brain function, and metabolites that affect hormonal signalling.
During menopause, disruptions to this three-way communication system may contribute to the simultaneous experience of digestive, cognitive, and mood symptoms that many women report. Rather than three separate problems, these may reflect different manifestations of a single interconnected system under stress.
This integrated view suggests that interventions supporting gut health may have benefits that extend beyond digestion, potentially influencing mood, cognitive clarity, and even hormonal symptom severity.
Practical recommendations
- Prioritise dietary diversity. Aim for 30+ different plant foods per week. Published research has shown that dietary diversity is one of the strongest predictors of microbial diversity.
- Increase fibre gradually. Work toward 30 grams per day, increasing slowly to minimise bloating and discomfort. Focus on prebiotic-rich sources.
- Include fermented foods daily. Even small servings of yoghurt, kefir, kimchi, or sauerkraut can contribute to microbial diversity over time.
- Track your digestive symptoms. Note patterns in relation to your menstrual cycle (if still cycling), diet, stress levels, and other menopausal symptoms. This data can reveal connections that are not apparent otherwise.
- Discuss gut health with your GP. If you're experiencing significant digestive changes during the menopausal transition, bring it up. These symptoms are common, real, and worth investigating in the hormonal context.
- Consider targeted probiotic supplementation. Based on your specific symptoms and in consultation with a healthcare clinician, specific probiotic strains may offer benefits.
- Manage stress. Given the gut-brain axis connection, stress management practices (meditation, yoga, adequate sleep) may have direct benefits for gut health.
See the whole picture
MARKABLE tracks hormonal wellness patterns alongside symptom monitoring, helping you and your clinician identify connections between different aspects of your health during the menopausal transition.
Start My Free Check →The bottom line
The gut microbiome is not a spectator during menopause. Through the estrobolome, gut bacteria actively participate in oestrogen metabolism, and through the gut-brain axis, they influence mood, cognition, and immune function. The menopausal decline in oestrogen changes the gut, and the changed gut can amplify the effects of hormone loss.
This bidirectional relationship means that gut health deserves a place in the menopause conversation alongside hormonal therapy, bone health, and cardiovascular risk. The science is still young, but the direction is clear: supporting the gut microbiome through diet, lifestyle, and targeted interventions may be one of the most accessible and impactful things women can do to support their health during the menopausal transition.