| Literature DB >> 29499716 |
Martin C Koch1, Johannes Lermann2, Niels van de Roemer3, Simone K Renner2, Stefanie Burghaus2, Janina Hackl2, Ralf Dittrich2, Sven Kehl2, Patricia G Oppelt2, Thomas Hildebrandt2, Caroline C Hack2, Uwe G Pöhls4, Stefan P Renner2, Falk C Thiel5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Daysy is a fertility monitor that uses the fertility awareness method by tracking and analyzing the individual menstrual cycle. In addition, Daysy can be connected to the application DaysyView to transfer stored personal data from Daysy to a smartphone or tablet (IOS, Android). This combination is interesting because as it is shown in various studies, the use of apps is increasing patients´ focus on their disease or their health behavior. The aim of this study was to investigate if by the additional use of an App and thereby improved usability of the medical device, it is possible to enhance the typical-use related as well as the method-related pregnancy rates. RESULT: In the resultant group of 125 women (2076 cycles in total), 2 women indicated that they had been unintentionally pregnant during the use of the device, giving a typical-use related Pearl-Index of 1.3. Counting only the pregnancies which occurred as a result of unprotected intercourse during the infertile (green) phase, we found 1 pregnancy, giving a method-related Pearl-Index of 0.6. Calculating the pregnancy rate resulting from continuous use and unprotected intercourse exclusively on green days, gives a perfect-use Pearl-Index of 0.8.Entities:
Keywords: Body basal temperature; FABM; Female contraception; Fertility awareness based method; Fertility monitor; Mobile application
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29499716 PMCID: PMC5833051 DOI: 10.1186/s12978-018-0479-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Reprod Health ISSN: 1742-4755 Impact factor: 3.223
% of woman experiencing an unintended pregnancy
| Method | Typical-use related pregnancy rates % | Perfect-use pregnancy rates % |
|---|---|---|
| Vasectomy [ | 0.15 | 0.10 |
| IUD with Copper [ | 0.8 | 0.6 |
| Oral Contraceptive/Pill [ | 9 | 0.3 |
| Fertility App [ | 8.3 | n/a |
| Natural Family Planning [ | 1.8 | 0.4 |
| Male Condom [ | 18 | 2 |
| Diaphragm [ | 12 | 6 |
Fig. 1General Information about age, BMI, cycle distribution and usage of the devise. a, Average age of participants. b, Primary usage of Daysy. c, BMI distribution among all participants (****t-test p = 0.0001). d, Cycle distribution among all participants
Fig. 2Distribution and frequency use of additional contraceptives by participating women. a, Distribution of additional contraceptives. b, Frequency of additional contraceptive use. c, Prior contraceptive use
Rate of unplanned pregnancies
| Cycle # | Woman exposed | Cumulative Pregnancy | Cumulative pregnancy probability (%) | CI, lower Limit (%) | CI, upper Limit (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 696 | 4 | 0.57 | 1.57 | 0.18 |
| 3 | 518 | 5 | 0.77 | 1.84 | 0.29 |
| 4 | 442 | 6 | 0.99 | 2.14 | 0.43 |
| 9 | 206 | 8 | 1.47 | 2.76 | 0.76 |
| 10 | 173 | 9 | 2.04 | 3.47 | 1.17 |
| 11 | 147 | 10 | 2,71 | 4.28 | 1.68 |
| 13 | 125 | 10 | 2,71 | 4.28 | 1.68 |
Fig. 3Rate of unplanned pregnancies (Kaplan-Meier), measured in ordinal cycle number. Annotation: after 13 cycles we cut the analysis; i.e. 2 unintended pregnancies after this time
Fig. 4General Cycle statistics correlated to users age. a, Cycle length on average (****t-test p = 0.0001; * t-test p = 0.0228). b, Distribution of irregular cycles. c, Length of menstruation
Fig. 5General use of the app DaysyView correlated with the amount of cycles