Abstract

Background: Low fertility persists but remains unexplained in Japan. We examined whether the probability of pregnancy was influenced by coital frequency, age, reproductive age (assessed by antimüllerian hormone, AMH), and BMI. Methods: We established a two-year prospective study with a sample of hormonally monitored Japanese women aged 23–34 years wanting to conceive their first child. For a maximum of 24 weeks participants recorded menstrual bleeding, sexual intercourse, ovulation, and pregnancy. Additional information on pregnancy and infertility treatment was collected one and two years after intake. Results: The natural conception rate and coital frequency were both low in this sample. Among 80 participants, 44% (35) naturally conceived in 24 weeks. After two years, 74% (59) of women had delivered or were currently pregnant, 50% (40) due to natural and 24% (19) due to assisted conception, and 5% (4) were lost to follow-up. By two years, 56% (45) of women had sought fertility treatment. In 18% (58/319) of the observed ovarian cycles across 24 weeks there was no intercourse in a fertile period. Higher coital frequency at intake was associated with increased probability of conception by 24 weeks of follow-up (OR 1.23, 95%CI 1.02, 1.47). Chronological age, reproductive age, and BMI were not associated with the probability of pregnancy at 24 weeks. Conclusions: Our results suggest that first, natural conception rates could potentially increase with more frequent and well timed intercourse, and second that further work is needed to understand why even in a motivated sample of women monitoring their fertile periods, both the conception and coitus rates were low.

Highlights

  • Low fertility has persisted in Japan for the last several decades

  • The Odds ratios (ORs) of conception for recorded coital frequency in a fertile period was 1.70

  • The observed proportion (20%) of detected pregnancies that ended in fetal loss is comparable to the value reported in a previous prospective study on fecundability, where 22% of the 198 pregnancies detected by urinary human chorionic gonadotropin (hCG) ended before pregnancy was detected clinically [37]

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Summary

Introduction

Low fertility has persisted in Japan for the last several decades. The total fertility rate (TFR) ofJapan was 1.4 in 2019 [1]. Low fertility has persisted in Japan for the last several decades. The National Fertility Survey of Japan in 2015 [2] reported that among married couples with no children, the proportion who had ever received infertility treatment or examination was 17.8% for couples with wives aged 20–29 years, 32.8% for those aged 30–39 years, and 29.4% for. Low fertility persists but remains unexplained in Japan. We examined whether the probability of pregnancy was influenced by coital frequency, age, reproductive age (assessed by antimüllerian hormone, AMH), and BMI. For a maximum of 24 weeks participants recorded menstrual bleeding, sexual intercourse, ovulation, and pregnancy. Results: The natural conception rate and coital frequency were both low in this sample. Among 80 participants, 44% (35) naturally conceived in 24 weeks

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