Objective: To quantify the natural decline in fecundability by age and assess the effect of selected volitional factors.
Design: Prospective cohort study of women attempting conception.
Setting: Not applicable.
Participant(s): A total of 2,820 women without infertility, trying to conceive for less than 3 cycles at study entry.
Intervention(s): None.
Main outcome measure(s): Fecundability.
Result(s): Age had little effect on fecundability except for women 35-40 years, for whom it was 0.77 relative to women aged 20-24 years. Male age showed a similar but smaller decrease, declining to 0.95 for men aged 35-39 years. The effect of age differed for parous and nulliparous women, with the latter experiencing much stronger age-related declines relative to fecundability at age 20 years. Frequency of intercourse, use of nonhormonal birth control as the last method, and timing of intercourse, each had small effects on fecundability. Women who were in the high-fecundability categories for all three of these volitional factors had an estimated probability of conceiving of 88% (95% confidence interval 83%-93%). Unlike age, these factors represent individual choices that together can offset some of the age-related decline in fecundability.
Conclusion(s): Fecundability peaks around age 30 years, slightly earlier for nulliparous than for parous women, and then declines. The decline with age is more modest for men. Couples will experience a compounded effect of their separate age-related declines. At age 40 years, a couple's fecundability would be approximately half of what it was at age 30 years, but some of this decline can be counteracted by volitional factors affecting conception.
Copyright © 2013 American Society for Reproductive Medicine. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.