Abstract

To identify, besides maternal age and the number of previous pregnancy losses, additional characteristics of couples with unexplained recurrent pregnancy loss (RPL) that improve the prediction of an ongoing pregnancy. Hospital-based cohort study in couples who visited specialized RPL units of two academic centers between 2012 and2020. Two academic centers in the Netherlands. Clinical data from 526 couples with unexplained RPL were used in this study. None. The final model to estimate the chance of a subsequent ongoing pregnancy was determined using a backward selection process and internally validated using bootstrapping. Model performance was assessed in terms of calibration and discrimination (area under the receiver operating characteristic curve). Subsequent ongoing pregnancy was achieved in 345 of 526 couples (66%). The number of previous pregnancy losses, maternal age, paternal age, maternal body mass index, paternal body mass index, maternal smoking status, and previous invitro fertilization/intracytoplasmic sperm injection treatment were predictive of the outcome. The optimism-corrected area under the receiver operating characteristic curve was 0.63 compared with 0.57 when using only the number of previous pregnancy losses and maternal age. The identification of additional predictors of a subsequent ongoing pregnancy after RPL, including male characteristics, is significant for both clinicians and couples with RPL. At the same time, we showed that the predictive ability of the current model is still limited and more research is warranted to develop a model that can be used in clinical practice.

Highlights

  • This study aimed to explore whether predicting the chance of a subsequent ongoing pregnancy in couples with unexplained recurrent pregnancy loss (RPL) could be improved by taking, besides maternal age and the number of previous pregnancy losses, additional candidate predictors into account

  • We showed that predicting the chance of a subsequent ongoing pregnancy beyond 24 weeks of gestation in couples with RPL becomes more accurate when, besides the conventional predictors maternal age and number of previous pregnancy losses, more variables are incorporated into the model

  • The predictive ability of the current model remains limited, and we emphasize that more research is needed to develop a model that can be used in clinical practice

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Summary

Objective

Besides maternal age and the number of previous pregnancy losses, additional characteristics of couples with unexplained recurrent pregnancy loss (RPL) that improve the prediction of an ongoing pregnancy. Two prognostic tools are recommended by the European Society of Human Reproduction and Embryology (ESHRE) guideline on RPL [2] Both models base their predictions on two factors: the number of preceding pregnancy losses and maternal age. This study aimed to explore whether predicting the chance of a subsequent ongoing pregnancy in couples with unexplained RPL could be improved by taking, besides maternal age and the number of previous pregnancy losses, additional candidate predictors into account. To our knowledge, this is the first time that the predictive potential of both maternal and paternal factors was evaluated in this context

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