Perfect- and typical-use effectiveness of the Dot fertility app over 13 cycles: results from a prospective contraceptive effectiveness trial

The European Journal of Contraception & Reproductive Health Care : the Official Journal of the European Society of Contraception, 24(2), 148-153

DOI 10.1080/13625187.2019.1581164

Abstract

Objective

Dynamic Optimal Timing (Dot) is a smartphone application (app) that estimates the menstrual cycle fertile window based on the user's menstrual period start dates. Dot uses machine learning to adapt to cycles over time and informs users of 'low' and 'high' fertility days. We investigated Dot's effectiveness, calculating perfectand typical-use failure rates.

Methods

This prospective, 13 cycle observational study (ClinicalTrials.gov NCT02833922) followed 718 women who were using Dot to prevent pregnancy. Participants contributed 6616 cycles between February 2017 and October 2018, providing data on menstrual period start dates, daily sexual activity and prospective intent to prevent pregnancy. We determined pregnancy through participant-administered urine pregnancy tests and/or written or verbal confirmation. We calculated perfectand typical-use failure rates using multi-censoring, single-decrement life-table analysis, and conducted sensitivity, attrition and survival analyses.

Results

The perfect-use failure rate was calculated to be 1.0% (95% confidence interval [CI]: 0.9%, 2.9%) and the typical-use failure rate was 5.0% (95% CI: 3.4%, 6.6%) for women aged 18-39 (n = 718). Survival analyses identified no significant differences among age or racial/ethnic groups or women in different types of relationships. Attrition analyses revealed no significant sociodemographic differences, except in age, between women completing 13 cycles and those exiting the study earlier.

Conclusion

Dot's effectiveness is within the range of other user-initiated contraceptive methods.

Topics

dot fertility app effectiveness, fertility awareness app contraceptive efficacy, digital fertility tracking effectiveness, smartphone fertility app study, dynamic optimal timing contraception, typical use fertility app failure rate, menstrual cycle app contraception, fabm digital tool effectiveness, machine learning fertility app, fertility app prospective trial, app-based fertility awareness method, cycle tracking contraception effectiveness

Cite this article

Jennings, V., Haile, L. T., Simmons, R. G., Spieler, J., & Shattuck, D. (2019). Perfect- and typical-use effectiveness of the Dot fertility app over 13 cycles: results from a prospective contraceptive effectiveness trial. *The European journal of contraception & reproductive health care : the official journal of the European Society of Contraception*, *24*(2), 148-153. https://doi.org/10.1080/13625187.2019.1581164

Related articles