(Open access funding provided by Semmelweis University)
Affective temperaments have been shown to robustly affect infertility treatment success.
However, identification of possible mediating factors through which they exert their
influence is still lacking. A growing number of results suggest that adherence to
recommended treatments may be such a mediator, on the one hand, because affective
temperaments are known to influence adherence and, on the other hand, because non-adherence
negatively influences the treatment outcome. Recommended treatment of infertility
involves, beyond medications, dietary and lifestyle changes. The aim of this retrospective
cohort study was to evaluate whether adherence to physician-prescribed diet and physical
activity recommendations mediates the effect of affective temperaments on infertility
treatment outcomes. Among 308 women who underwent infertility treatment in an Assisted
Reproduction Center, affective temperaments, adherence to diet, adherence to physical
exercise, and infertility treatment success (clinical pregnancy) were assessed besides
detailed medical history and demographic parameters. Associations between affective
temperaments, adherence to diet and recommended physical activity, and assisted reproduction
outcomes were analyzed using generalized linear models and causal mediation analysis.
Adherence to physical activity didn’t have an effect, but diet adherence increased
the odds of infertility treatment success by 130% suggesting its role as a potential
mediator. Based on causal mediation analysis, higher depressive and anxious temperament
scores were directly associated with 63% and 45% lower odds of achieving clinical
pregnancy, respectively, with effects not mediated by diet adherence. Higher irritable
temperament scores indirectly decreased the odds of achieving clinical pregnancy by
14%, mediated by diet adherence; while higher cyclothymic temperament scores decreased
the odds of achieving clinical pregnancy both directly by 51% and indirectly, mediated
by diet adherence by 11%. Our results suggest that diet adherence mediates the mechanism
by which irritable and cyclothymic affective temperaments influence IVF treatment
success. Since adherence is a modifiable risk factor of infertility treatment success,
screening for affective temperaments may help to identify potentially high-risk non-adherent
patient groups and offer patient-tailored treatment, which may help increase the chances
of a successful pregnancy and live birth in women undergoing IVF treatment.