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Time-to-conception and clinical pregnancy rate with a myo-inositol, probiotics and micronutrient supplement: secondary outcomes of the NiPPeR Randomized Trial.

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posted on 2024-01-24, 19:02 authored by Shiao-Yng Chan, Sheila J Barton, See Ling Loy, Hsin Fang Chang, Philip Titcombe, Jui-Tsung Wong, Marilou Ebreo, Judith Ong, Karen Ml Tan, Heidi Nield, Sarah El-Heis, Timothy Kenealy, Chong Yap-Seng, Philip N Baker, Wayne S Cutfield, Keith M Godfrey, NiPPeR Study Group

Objective

To determine whether a combined myo-inositol, probiotics and micronutrient nutritional supplement impacts time-to-natural-conception and clinical pregnancy rates.


Design

Secondary outcomes of a double-blind randomized controlled trial.


Setting

Community recruitment.


Patients

Women aged 18 to 38 years planning to conceive in the United Kingdom, Singapore, and New Zealand, excluding those with diabetes mellitus or receiving fertility treatment.


Intervention

A standard (control) supplement (folic acid, iron, calcium, iodine, β-carotene), compared with an intervention additionally containing myo-inositol, probiotics, and other micronutrients (vitamins B2, B6, B12, D, zinc).


Main Outcome Measures

Number of days between randomization and estimated date of natural conception of a clinical pregnancy, as well as cumulative pregnancy rates at 3, 6, and 12 months.


Results

Of 1729 women randomized, 1437 (83%; intervention, n=736; control, n=701) provided data. Kaplan-Meier curves of conception were similar between intervention and control groups; the time at which 20% achieved natural conception was 90.5 days (95% confidence interval: 80.7, 103.5) in the intervention group compared with 92.0 days (76.0, 105.1) in the control group. Cox's proportional hazard ratios (HRs) comparing intervention against control for cumulative achievement of pregnancy (adjusted for site, ethnicity, age, body mass index, and gravidity) were similar at 3, 6, and 12 months. Among both study groups combined, overall time-to-conception lengthened with higher preconception body mass index, and was longer in non-White than in White women. Among women who were overweight the intervention shortened time-to-conception compared with control regardless of ethnicity (12-month HR=1.47 [1.07, 2.02], P=.016; 20% conceived by 84.5 vs. 117.0 days) and improved it to that comparable to nonoverweight/nonobese women (20% conceived by 82.1 days). In contrast, among women with obesity, time-to-conception was lengthened with intervention compared with control (12-month HR=0.69 [0.47, 1.00]; P=.053; 20% conceived by 132.7 vs. 108.5 days); an effect predominantly observed in non-White women with obesity.


Conclusions

Time-to-natural-conception and clinical pregnancy rates within a year were overall similar in women receiving the intervention supplement compared with control. Overweight women had a longer time-to-conception but there was suggestion that the supplement may shorten their time-to-conception to that comparable to the nonoverweight/nonobese women. Further studies are required to confirm this.

History

Author affiliation

College of Life Sciences, University of Leicester

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

Fertility and sterility

Volume

119

Issue

6

Pagination

1031-1042

Publisher

Elsevier BV

issn

0015-0282

eissn

1556-5653

Copyright date

2023

Available date

2024-01-24

Spatial coverage

United States

Language

eng

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