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Obese couples may take longer to achieve pregnancy

By Reuters - Mar 01,2017 - Last updated at Mar 01,2017

Photo courtesy of cutcaster.com

Couples who are obese may take longer to achieve pregnancy than partners who aren’t as overweight, a recent US study suggests.

Previous studies in women have linked obesity to difficulties getting pregnant. In the current study, neither male nor female obesity alone was linked to taking a longer time to conceive, but when both partners were obese, the couple took up to 59 per cent longer to conceive than non-obese counterparts.

“If our results are confirmed, fertility specialists may want to take couples’ weight status into account when counselling them about achieving pregnancy,” said Lead Study Author Rajeshwari Sundaram of the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development in Bethesda, Maryland.

“The benefits of a healthy weight are well-known: obesity increases the risk for diseases such as type 2 diabetes, heart disease and cancer,” Sundaram added by email.

Sundaram and colleagues focused on the relationship between pregnancy and body mass index (BMI), a ratio of weight to height. A BMI between 18.5 and 24.9 is considered a healthy weight, while 25 to 29.9 is overweight, 30 or above is obese and 40 or higher is what’s known as morbidly obese.

An adult who is 175cm tall and weighs 72kg, for example, would have a BMI which is in the healthy range. An obese adult at that height would weigh at least 92kg and have a BMI of 30 or more.

Researchers categorised individuals into two subgroups: obese class I, with a BMI from 30 to 34.9, and obese class II, with a BMI of 35 or greater.

Overall, 27 per cent of the women and 41 per cent of the men were obese class I or heavier. 

Then, the researchers compared the average time to conceive for couples where neither partner was obese to couples where both fell into the obese class II group.

Couples in the obese class II group took 55 per cent longer to achieve pregnancy than their normal weight counterparts, the study team calculated.

After accounting for other factors that influence fertility such as age, smoking status, exercise and cholesterol levels, obese class II couples took 59 per cent longer to get pregnant. 

About 40 per cent of the men and 47 per cent of the women also had enough excess fat around the midsection to potentially influence fertility. 

In addition, 60 per cent of the women and 58 per cent of the men said they exercised no more than once a week, the researchers report in Human Reproduction. 

Beyond its small size, another limitation of the study is that it wasn’t a controlled experiment designed to determine whether obesity directly causes infertility, the authors note. It also focused on couples in the general population, not people undergoing treatment for infertility, so the results might not reflect what would happen for all couples trying to conceive, the researchers point out. 

However, unlike many other studies of obesity and fertility, the current analysis used height and weight measured by clinicians instead of relying on participants to report this information themselves, which may make the findings more accurate. 

Obesity can influence fertility by altering hormone levels in both men and women, converting testosterone to oestrogen, said Dr Jeffrey Goldberg, section head of reproductive endocrinology at the Cleveland Clinic in Ohio. 

“If you have more fat there is more conversion from testosterone to oestrogen,” Goldberg, who wasn’t involved in the study, said. 

It makes sense that obese couples would take longer to conceive because excess weight doesn’t just impact fertility in women. 

 

“For women, extra weight impairs ovulatory function,” Goldberg said. “For guys, having lower testosterone and higher oestrogen impairs sperm production and having a lot of fat around the scrotum, fat thighs and fat around the abdomen raises the scrotal temperature and that can also have an adverse effect.”

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