Vitamin D and assisted reproductive treatment outcome: a prospective cohort study
Reproductive Health, December 2019, 16:106
Justin ChuIoannis Gallos Aurelio Tobias Lynne Robinson Jackson Kirkman-Brown Rima Dhillon-Smith Hoda Harb Abey Eapen Madhurima Rajkhowa Arri Coomarasamy
Each 1 ng increase in blood level of vitamin D increases clinical pregnancy by 6% PDF
Fertility and Sperm category contains the following summary
See also:
Overview Women and Vitamin D
Overview Pregnancy and vitamin D Fertility and Vitamin D – several articles
Endometriosis
Ensure a healthy pregnancy and baby - take Vitamin D before conception
IVF OR "IN VITRO FERTILIZATION" etc. in 18 VitaminDWiki titles
 Download the PDF from VitaminDWiki
Background
Vitamin D deficiency has been associated with an increased risk of abnormal pregnancy implantation leading to obstetric complications such as pre-eclampsia and fetal growth restriction. However, the effect of vitamin D on reproductive treatment outcomes in couples undergoing assisted reproductive treatment is poorly understood. This study investigates the association between vitamin D and reproductive treatment outcomes in women undergoing assisted reproductive treatments?
Methods
A prospective cohort study conducted at a large tertiary teaching hospital, United Kingdom. Five hundred women undergoing assisted reproductive treatment were recruited between September 2013 and September 2015. All participants had their serum vitamin D measured and their reproductive treatment outcomes collated. Women were categorised in to three groups: vitamin D replete (> 75 nmol/L), insufficient (50-75 nmol/L) and deficient (< 50 nmol/L) according to Endocrine Society guidance. The primary outcome was live birth. Secondary outcomes included biochemical pregnancy, clinical pregnancy and pregnancy loss rates.
Results
Vitamin D deficiency was found in 53.2% (266/500) of participants and vitamin D insufficiency was found in 30.8% (154/500) of participants. Only 16% (80/500) of women were vitamin D replete. The live birth rates for vitamin D deficient, insufficient and replete women were 23.2% (57/246), 27.0% (38/141) and 37.7% (29/77) respectively (p = 0.04). The respective live birth rates for vitamin D deficient, insufficient and replete women were 24.3, 27.1, 34.4% after adjustment for key prognostic factors (p = 0.25).
Conclusions
Vitamin D deficiency and insufficiency are common in women undergoing assisted reproductive treatments. The crude live birth rate achieved in women undergoing assisted reproductive treatments are associated with serum vitamin D, although statistical significance is lost when adjusting for important prognostic variables. Vitamin D deficiency could be an important condition to treat in women considering fertility treatment. A research trial to investigate the benefits of vitamin D deficiency treatment would test this hypothesis.
There have been 3038 visits to this page
Vitamin D associated with 60 percent better assisted reproduction success – Dec 2019
516 visitors, last modified 17 Feb, 2024,
Printer Friendly
Follow this page for updates
This page is in the following categories (# of items in each category)
Attached files
ID
Name
Uploaded
Size
Downloads
12690
Vit D helps conception.jpg
admin 28 Sep, 2019
39.40 Kb
478
12689
Vitamin D and assisted reproductive treatment outcome.pdf
admin 28 Sep, 2019
1.50 Mb
576
516 visitors, last modified 17 Feb, 2024, |
ID | Name | Uploaded | Size | Downloads | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
12690 | Vit D helps conception.jpg | admin 28 Sep, 2019 | 39.40 Kb | 478 | |
12689 | Vitamin D and assisted reproductive treatment outcome.pdf | admin 28 Sep, 2019 | 1.50 Mb | 576 |