Objectives
To examine association of conception by assisted reproductive technology (ART) with offspring cardio-metabolic health outcomes, and whether these differ by offspring age.
Design
Multi-cohort study.
Setting
Fourteen population-based cohort studies with offspring from the UK, Ireland, France, the Netherlands, Portugal, Greece, Italy, Norway, Singapore, and Australia for meta-analysis of various ages. Four cohorts (three European and one Singaporean) with repeated measures for pooled age-change (from 3 to 26 years) trajectory analysis.
Participants
Young people sampled from the general population with complete data on mode of conception, confounders, and ≥1 cardio-metabolic outcome measured after birth.
Exposures
Conception by ART versus natural conception (NC).
Main outcome measures
Systolic (SBP) and diastolic blood pressure (DBP), heart rate (HR), total cholesterol (TC), high-density lipoprotein cholesterol (HDLc), low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDLc), triglycerides (TG), glucose, insulin, and glycated haemoglobin (HbA1c).
Results
Between 35,780 (605 ART) and 4,502 (67 ART) offspring were included in meta-analysis of various ages for each outcome. Mean age at outcome assessment ranged from 13 months to 27.4 years, with most cohorts ((11/14) having mean age <10 years. Compared with NC, ART-conceived offspring had similar SBP (mean difference (ART minus NC): -0.89mmHg; 95%CI: -1.91 to 0.14), DBP (-0.50mmHg; -1.65 to 0.66), and HR (0.02beats/min; -1.00 to 1.03). Cholesterol measures were higher in ART-conceived than NC offspring, for TC (mean % difference: 2.54%; 0.46 to 4.61), HDLc (4.17%; 1.79 to 6.56), and LDLc (4.95%; 0.99 to 8.92), whereas triglycerides were similar (-1.53%; -6.19 to 3.13). No clear differences were seen for glucose (0.25%; -1.38 to 1.88), insulin (-5.04%; -13.20 to 3.12), or HbA1c (-0.07%; -0.14 to 0.00). Trajectory models in up to 17,244 (244 ART) offspring showed that early life trajectory differences were consistent with the above pooled results and showed higher SBP with ART emerging from mid-adolescence to adulthood (e.g., predicted mean difference in SBP at age 26 years for ART versus NC was 5.06mmHg; 1.76 to 8.35).
Conclusions
Children conceived through ART had higher cholesterol and similar blood pressure and hyperglycaemic/insulin resistance measures compared with NC children. Whilst overall this is reassuring, our trajectory analysis in a sub-group of cohorts suggested that those conceived by ART may go on to develop higher blood pressure in early adulthood. Our study shows the importance of follow-up into adulthood and requires validation by independent studies with different study designs including within-sibship and mechanistic studies.