Cancer treatment can change lives in many visible and invisible ways. One of the most overlooked side effects is menopause caused or accelerated by cancer therapies – often arriving suddenly and bringing physical, emotional, and psychological challenges that can feel isolating and overwhelming.
That is why Red Door Community’s recent Expert Speaker Series presentation, “Menopause After Cancer Treatment: What Every Survivor Should Know,” was such an important conversation for the cancer community.
Led by Dr. Samantha Dunham, OB/GYN and Co-Director of the Center for Midlife Health and Menopause, the May 20 lecture provided compassionate, evidence-based guidance on topics including medically induced menopause, surgical menopause, symptom management, sexual health, brain fog, mood changes, and safe non-hormonal treatment options.
For many people impacted by cancer, menopause is not simply a natural life transition. Symptoms can affect sleep, concentration, relationships, intimacy, emotional wellbeing, and overall quality of life – all while navigating treatment and survivorship.
Conversations like this are important because they validate experiences that many survivors silently endure and create space for open, honest dialogue about issues that are often overlooked in cancer care. Education around treatment-related menopause also helps caregivers, partners, and families better understand the physical and emotional changes their loved ones may be facing, strengthening empathy, communication, and support.
Most importantly, discussions like this remind individuals living with cancer that they are not alone, and that support, education, and community matter at every stage of survivorship.
This presentation is part of Red Door Community’s Expert Speaker Series, made possible in part through support from Regeneron.
Red Door Community’s Expert Speaker Series reflects its ongoing commitment to providing accessible, evidence-informed education that helps individuals and families navigate cancer with knowledge, connection, and dignity.