Vitamin D and Ovarian Reserve and Fecundability among Women with Proven Fecundity

  • University of Haifa ROR
  • Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development ROR
  • University of Colorado Denver ROR
  • Intermountain Healthcare ROR
  • University of Utah ROR
  • Department of Epidemiology and Environmental Health, School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences, State University of New York at Buffalo, Buffalo, NY. ROR
  • University at Buffalo Buffalo NY
  • Johns Hopkins University ROR

The FASEB Journal, 30(S1)

DOI 10.1096/fasebj.30.1_supplement.290.6

Abstract

Objective

Vitamin D is associated with markers of ovarian reserve in women of advanced reproductive age and

in vitro

studies suggest that vitamin D may influence anti‐mullerian hormone (AMH). Higher vitamin D levels are also associated with improved IVF outcomes in some studies. However, less is understood regarding associations with ovarian reserve or time to pregnancy among younger women or women without a history of infertility. Our purpose was to assess the relationships between vitamin D and AMH and fecundability among women with proven fecundity.

Design

Secondary analysis of the EAGeR Trial, a multicenter, block‐randomized, double‐blind, placebo‐controlled clinical trial to evaluate the effect of preconception‐initiated daily low dose aspirin on reproductive outcomes in women with a history of pregnancy loss and normal fecundity.

Methods

Participants were attempting pregnancy, aged 18–40 years, with 1–2 prior pregnancy losses and no history of infertility. We assessed 25‐OH vitamin D and AMH in serum at baseline (not pregnant) among 1185 women. AMH levels were log‐transformed for normality. Linear regression was used to estimate associations between vitamin D and AMH concentrations adjusting for age, body mass index, race, season, physical activity, and number of prior losses. Time to hCG detected pregnancy was assessed using Cox proportional hazard regression models for discrete survival time, accounting for left truncation and right censoring, to estimate fecundability odds ratios (FOR), adjusting for the same factors.

Results

A total of 163 women (13.8%) had deficient vitamin D levels (<20 ng/mL). Overall, vitamin D levels were not associated with AMH (percent change −1.6, 95% confidence interval [CI] −5.3%, 2.3% per 10 ng/mL). Vitamin D deficiency was also not associated with AMH (deficient: adjusted geometric mean AMH 2.51, 95% CI 2.20, 2.85 vs. inadequate/sufficient: 2.74, 95% CI 2.60, 2.89). There also were no significant associations observed between overall vitamin D levels or deficiency and fecundability (FOR 1.09, 95% CI 0.84, 1.42 comparing deficient vs. inadequate/sufficient) after adjustment.

Conclusions

Vitamin D was not associated with AMH, time to pregnancy, or fecundability among women with proven fecundity. These results suggest that vitamin D is not associated with ovarian reserve or fecundability and that vitamin D supplementation may offer little clinical benefit for improving markers of ovarian reserve and fecundity.

Support or Funding Information

Intramural Research Program, DIPHR, NICHD, NIH

Topics

vitamin D ovarian reserve anti-mullerian hormone AMH fecundability, vitamin D deficiency time to pregnancy fecundity women, 25-hydroxyvitamin D AMH ovarian reserve young women, vitamin D supplementation fertility reproductive outcomes, EAGeR trial vitamin D ovarian reserve secondary analysis, Mumford Stanford vitamin D fecundability proven fecundity, vitamin D levels AMH association reproductive age women, preconception vitamin D status pregnancy loss recurrent miscarriage, vitamin D ovarian reserve IVF outcomes versus natural conception, anti-mullerian hormone vitamin D deficiency fecundability odds ratio
DOI 10.1096/fasebj.30.1_supplement.290.6 10.1096/fasebj.30.1_supplement.290.6

Cite this article

Mumford, S. L., Silver, R., Sjaarda, L. A., Galai, N., Stanford, J., Lynch, A., Lesher, L., Perkins, N., Wactawski‐Wende, J., Garbose, R., Kim, K., Michels, K., & Schisterman, E. (2016). Vitamin D and Ovarian Reserve and Fecundability among Women with Proven Fecundity. *The FASEB Journal*, *30*(S1). https://doi.org/10.1096/fasebj.30.1_supplement.290.6

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