
Female Hormone Health, PCOS, Endometriosis, Fertility & Breast Cancer | Dr. Thaïs Aliabadi
Dr. Thaïs Aliabadi (guest), Andrew Huberman (host), Andrew Huberman (host)
In this episode of Huberman Lab, featuring Dr. Thaïs Aliabadi and Andrew Huberman, Female Hormone Health, PCOS, Endometriosis, Fertility & Breast Cancer | Dr. Thaïs Aliabadi explores ending Silent Suffering: PCOS, Endometriosis, Fertility And Breast Cancer Dr. Thaïs Aliabadi, a leading OB-GYN and surgeon, explains why PCOS and endometriosis—top causes of female infertility—are massively underdiagnosed and frequently dismissed as “normal” or “in your head.” She details how disruptions in brain–ovary signaling, insulin resistance, chronic inflammation, genetics, and lifestyle interact to create PCOS, and why classical fertility charts that only consider age are dangerously misleading.
Ending Silent Suffering: PCOS, Endometriosis, Fertility And Breast Cancer
Dr. Thaïs Aliabadi, a leading OB-GYN and surgeon, explains why PCOS and endometriosis—top causes of female infertility—are massively underdiagnosed and frequently dismissed as “normal” or “in your head.” She details how disruptions in brain–ovary signaling, insulin resistance, chronic inflammation, genetics, and lifestyle interact to create PCOS, and why classical fertility charts that only consider age are dangerously misleading.
She outlines how to self-screen for PCOS and endometriosis using symptoms, blood tests (especially AMH), and ultrasound, plus how to advocate for proper imaging and hormonal evaluation even when doctors are rushed or resistant. Treatment is framed as multi-layered: lifestyle, targeted supplements, metformin, GLP‑1 drugs, ovulation-inducing medications, and, when needed, surgery and hormonal suppression.
The conversation also covers egg freezing strategy, perimenopause and PMDD, and a powerful, practical framework for breast cancer risk: every woman should know her lifetime Tyrer–Cuzick risk score and use it to guide when and how often to start imaging. Aliabadi emphasizes that women’s pain is real, that dismissals are systemic, and that informed self‑advocacy can literally save fertility and lives.
Key Takeaways
Irregular periods, acne, hair loss, weight struggle, and mood issues together often signal PCOS—regardless of labs or weight.
PCOS is the most common hormone disorder in reproductive-age women (≈15–20%) yet >70–90% are undiagnosed. ...
Get the full analysis with uListen AI
Every girl and woman should know her egg count (AMH) and be screened early for PCOS and endometriosis, especially if there is pain or cycle irregularity.
Aliabadi argues AMH testing and screening for PCOS/endometriosis should be routine from late teens onward. ...
Get the full analysis with uListen AI
Insulin resistance and chronic inflammation are central drivers of PCOS and must be treated, not just masked with birth control pills.
In PCOS, GnRH firing, LH/FSH imbalance, and androgen excess disrupt ovulation, but insulin resistance amplifies everything: high insulin drives more ovarian androgens, suppresses sex hormone binding globulin (raising free testosterone), and pushes excess glucose into visceral fat, which releases inflammatory cytokines. ...
Get the full analysis with uListen AI
Painful periods, painful sex, and recurrent “UTIs” or GI pain that are written off as normal are classic red flags for endometriosis.
Endometriosis affects at least 10–20% of women (Aliabadi believes >20%) and is the leading cause of chronic pelvic pain and a top cause of infertility. ...
Get the full analysis with uListen AI
Surgery and hormonal suppression for endometriosis must be done by an expert; many laparoscopies miss stromal disease and send women home labelled “normal.”
Gold standard diagnosis and treatment is laparoscopic excision, not just burning lesions. ...
Get the full analysis with uListen AI
Fertility planning must integrate PCOS, endometriosis, AMH, and age—classical age-only fertility curves are dangerously misleading.
Standard curves that show “normal” fertility by age assume no PCOS or endometriosis, which is false for a huge subset of women. ...
Get the full analysis with uListen AI
Every woman should know her lifetime breast cancer risk (Tyrer–Cuzick) and use it to push for earlier and more intensive imaging when indicated.
Average female lifetime breast cancer risk is ~12. ...
Get the full analysis with uListen AI
Notable Quotes
“If every 20-year-old in this country would go through my office once at age 20, I would shut down these fertility clinics.”
— Dr. Thaïs Aliabadi
“Painful periods are not normal. It should be a billboard on every freeway: ‘Painful periods are not normal. #endometriosis.’”
— Dr. Thaïs Aliabadi
“Women’s symptoms get dismissed, minimized, or completely ignored. Behind these dismissals are millions of women suffering undiagnosed PCOS, endometriosis, chronic pelvic pain, and infertility.”
— Dr. Thaïs Aliabadi
“If men had a condition that scarred their scrotums, caused severe pain with sex, and was the top cause of their infertility, do you think most of them would go undiagnosed?”
— Dr. Thaïs Aliabadi
“I strongly believe that over 50% of PCOS patients also have endometriosis. If you only address PCOS and ignore their pain, they’re not getting pregnant.”
— Dr. Thaïs Aliabadi
Questions Answered in This Episode
For a woman with clear PCOS symptoms but normal testosterone labs and regular cycles, what exact tests and ultrasound criteria should she push her doctor to order so her PCOS phenotype isn’t missed?
Dr. ...
Get the full analysis with uListen AI
If a teenager has disabling cramps and suspected endometriosis, how can parents and clinicians balance the risk of early hormonal suppression or surgery against the risk of silently losing egg reserve in her teens?
She outlines how to self-screen for PCOS and endometriosis using symptoms, blood tests (especially AMH), and ultrasound, plus how to advocate for proper imaging and hormonal evaluation even when doctors are rushed or resistant. ...
Get the full analysis with uListen AI
You argued that over 50% of PCOS patients likely have coexisting endometriosis; if that’s true, do you think current IVF success rates and cost structures would dramatically shift if clinics systematically screened and treated endometriosis first?
The conversation also covers egg freezing strategy, perimenopause and PMDD, and a powerful, practical framework for breast cancer risk: every woman should know her lifetime Tyrer–Cuzick risk score and use it to guide when and how often to start imaging. ...
Get the full analysis with uListen AI
For high‑risk breast cancer patients who qualify for prophylactic mastectomy but are hesitant, what decision-making framework and concrete risk‑versus‑benefit numbers do you walk them through to help them choose between intensified imaging, tamoxifen, and surgery?
Get the full analysis with uListen AI
Given how undertrained most clinicians are in advanced laparoscopic endometriosis surgery, what realistic steps can health systems and medical schools take in the next 5–10 years to ensure more surgeons can reliably recognize and excise stromal and deep infiltrating disease?
Get the full analysis with uListen AI
Transcript Preview
Every single ophthalmologist knows about cataract.
Yes.
They will not-
Most common form of, of, of blindness.
So, it would be rare for you to go to an ophthalmologist with cataract and not get diagnosed, correct?
Correct.
So, why is it that the leading cause of infertility on this planet, 90% of women are not diagnosed? Women's health is very different than other fields of medicine. It's very... It's a different monster. It's that cataract patient that goes to 20 ophthalmologists and she keeps saying, "I can't see," and the ophthalmologist says, "You're crazy. There's nothing wrong with you."
(upbeat music) Welcome to the Huberman Lab Podcast, where we discuss science and science-based tools for everyday life. I'm Andrew Huberman, and I'm a professor of neurobiology and ophthalmology at Stanford School of Medicine. My guest today is Dr. Thais Aliabadi, an obstetrician, gynecologist, and surgeon, and one of the most sought after experts and trusted voices in women's health. Today, we discuss crucial topics in women's reproductive and general health, including PCOS, endometriosis, breast cancer, perimenopause, and menopause. Dr. Aliabadi explains why so many cases of PCOS and endometriosis go undiagnosed and how many physicians unfortunately write off things like pain, hair thinning, mood changes, and other symptoms as normal, when in fact they reflect larger underlying issues that can impair fertility and lead to body-wide health complications. And she explains the key things to do to diagnose and treat PCOS and endometriosis, everything from how to adjust insulin sensitivity to hormone replacement, over-the-counter and prescription-based protocols. As you'll soon hear, Dr. Aliabadi is incredibly passionate about women's health and has developed various zero-cost online tools that women of any age can use to assess their risk for things like breast cancer, PCOS, and endometriosis. I should also emphasize that today's discussion is relevant to women of all ages. Many of the conditions we discuss are starting to show up in women even in their mid teens and 20s and can carry serious health risks. Dr. Aliabadi makes very clear that often these issues can be resolved, but that it requires knowing the telltale signs and taking the appropriate steps. She explains that, alas, many doctors and even OBGYNs are unaware of those telltale markers. So, what you're about to hear is an extremely eye-opening conversation that, thanks to Dr. Aliabadi's passion for and expertise in women's health, could very well save someone's mental and physical health, their fertility, and in the case of breast cancer screening, even their life. Before we begin, I'd like to emphasize that this podcast is separate from my teaching and research roles at Stanford. It is however part of my desire and effort to bring zero-cost-to-consumer information about science and science-related tools to the general public. In keeping with that theme, today's episode does include sponsors. And now for my discussion with Dr. Thais Aliabadi. Dr. Thais Aliabadi, welcome.
Thank you for having me.
Super excited to talk about today's topics, and there are a lot of them, because I think these days we hear a tremendous amount about how fertility rates are dropping, we hear that sperm counts are dropping, we hear that things like PCOS, which you'll explain to us, are on the rise. I'm curious if they're on the rise or they're just being detected or not detected as much. Let's start off quite simply and just bracket for people what the sort of standard trajectory of fertility looks like, uh, for the, quote-unquote, "average woman." I realize there's no such thing as an average woman, but I think we hear so much these days about people are waiting to have kids, some people are freezing eggs early, all this. If we were to just march through and say, you know, um, what fraction of healthy women are fertile in their, say, 20 to 25, 25 to 30, and march that forward just to give people a sense of what the data and your experience really tell us.
Install uListen to search the full transcript and get AI-powered insights
Get Full TranscriptGet more from every podcast
AI summaries, searchable transcripts, and fact-checking. Free forever.
Add to Chrome