In the DAIFI cohort, a large retrospective cohort of 6,507 couples who began IVF treatment between 2000 and 2002, 36% of the initial cohort participated in a postal questionnaire survey 6 to 9

years later, after the first or second mailing; 38% of the cohort members could not be contacted and 26% were contacted but did not respond.
Thirty-eight percent of cohort members could not be contacted 6 to 9

years after beginning IVF treatment because they had moved to a new address. This proportion of lost to follow-up is similar to that observed in other studies of couples after IVF treatment. Among 1,614 eligible German couples, 44% could not be contacted 5

years after the birth of their ICSI child
[
25]. Among 475 eligible English couples, 25.5% could not be contacted 4 to 10

years after referral to a fertility clinic
[
26]. Obviously, the issue of loss to follow-up is not specific to IVF populations. For example, in the NEMESIS study investigating mental health in the general population in the Netherlands, 20% of attrition in the second wave was due to failure to locate or to contact respondents after only one year of follow-up
[
27]. To mitigate the problem of contact, most prospective cohorts use processes such as annual update of address or contact details of relatives or friends
[
28,
29]. However, even with efforts to trace participants, in the Australian Longitudinal Study on Women’s Health 21% of 18- to 23-year-old women could not be contacted 4

years after the first survey
[
8]. It is thus important to understand factors associated with non-contact. We observed a roughly linear relation between the woman’s age and the probability of contact, corresponding to greater mobility of younger couples, a finding which is in agreement with previous studies
[
5,
27]. As could logically be expected, women who had more recently begun IVF treatment in their inclusion center were more likely to be contacted (as they had shorter duration of follow-up), as were women with more numerous IVF attempts because they had left the center more recently and so also had a shorter duration of follow-up. The association between inclusion center and probability of contact may be linked to differences between centers in financial and human resources devoted to patient address update. It may also reflect the geographic location of the center as well as population dynamics, with mobility rates that can vary widely between regions. For instance, a change of address may be more likely in more urbanized areas
[
27]. Lack of association between origin of infertility and contact suggests that medical factors do not have an impact on contact. Nevertheless, the association that we observed between the total number of embryos obtained at first attempt and probability of contact was an unexpected finding, as was the association with having a child after IVF treatment. The greater probability of contact among couples who had a live birth following treatment is particularly surprising, because a birth is one of the reasons for a change of address (need for one more bedroom). A higher rate of relocation among couples who did not have a child during IVF treatment could partly be due to a higher rate of couple separation. Such a hypothesis would need to be confirmed by further research.
Among the 4,029 couples contacted, 58% responded to the postal questionnaire. This rate appears similar to the few reported response rates among contacted couples in studies of IVF couples, and which ranged from 44% to 75%
[
23,
26,
30,
31]. In an IVF population, non-response could be linked to the physical and psychological burden of IVF treatment, especially when the treatment has not led to the expected live birth
[
23]. However, some similar response rates have been reported in studies among young women. For example, in the Australian Longitudinal Study on Woman’s Health, 64% of women aged 18 to 23

years responded seven years after the first survey
[
17]. Another recent study among uninsured women aged 15 to 44

years reported a response rate of 61% with a median follow-up of only 2.4

years
[
32]. These results in fact led us to question the hypothesis that a lower response rate among IVF couples may be linked to the burden of treatment. Regarding factors associated with response, in our study an inverse-J relation was observed between the woman’s age and the probability of response. A similar relationship has been demonstrated between the woman’s age and the IVF live-birth rate
[
33,
34]. The inverse J-pattern between age and response suggests that age impacts as a medical factor on probability of response. Probability of response was also associated with inclusion center. Differences observed between centers may reflect in part couples’ feelings on their IVF treatment in the center, but probably also reflect sociodemographic characteristics of couples that may vary according to geographic location. Indeed, socioeconomic and educational levels are known to be associated with response rates in epidemiological studies
[
1,
8]. The trend toward a higher response rate among couples with unexplained infertility than in couples with infertility of female origin also suggests that demographic and medical factors influence contact and response in different ways. Our results may appear to differ from those of Cahill et al., who found that response rate to a postal questionnaire 4 to 10

years after referral to an IVF center was not significantly affected by the woman’s age, duration of infertility or ever having been pregnant or not
[
26]. However, in this English study, lack of significant differences may be due to a lack of power, as the analyses were conducted on a small sample (
n
=

354). Participation was found to be strongly associated with birth of a child during treatment, indicating that there was a selection bias among the respondents to the postal survey. When the frequency of parenthood project achievement is being estimated, methods such as multiple imputation, that can adjusted for non-participation, should be used.