A new at-home saliva test, which the makers say is as effective as birth control pills at preventing pregnancy – and which tracks a hormone that plays a role in fertility – will soon roll out across Europe, reports Euronews Health.
The device from Inne, a Berlin-based women’s health tech company, has been available for years as a fertility-monitoring tool designed to help women increase their chances of pregnancy.
Called Minilab, it tracks users’ progesterone – the sex hormone that plays a role in fertility – via daily changes in their saliva, and can now also be used to prevent pregnancy, after a small study showed the device was 92% effective, about on par with birth control pills, but without any of the side effects.
“Progesterone can be used for conception or contraception,” said Eirini Rapti, Inne’s chief executive and founder.
Device review
The British Standards Institution, which reviews medical device manufacturers in Europe, certified Inne’s Minilab this month, meaning it can now be sold as a contraceptive device as well as a fertility tracker.
Inne will roll out the device in the EU in September, with sales in the United Kingdom to follow.
The device is part of a new wave of women’s health apps that have gained steam in recent years by infusing tech into fertility awareness, to make these contraceptive methods more effective, scientifically rigorous, and personalised.
Key competitors like Natural Cycles – which, in 2017, became the EU’s first certified contraceptive app – rely on temperature readings to track hormonal levels. But Rapti said saliva, as “hardcore biological data”, is more accurate because it isn’t affected by, for example, having a fever or sweating.
While blood tests are considered the gold standard for hormone tracking, some research indicates saliva could be a promising alternative because it is cheaper, faster, and can be done easily at home.
The Minilab device is easy to use. Around the same time each day, the user spits into a test strip and inserts it into a small device that measures their progesterone.
Those data feed back into an app, which learns about their hormonal fluctuations over time. That allows it to identify their fertile window, or the roughly six days per month when they are most likely to fall pregnant.
Study small but promising
In the company’s observational study, more than 200 women in Germany used the Minilab for six months. They were advised not to have unprotected sex on days the app said they were fertile, and asked to record their sexual activity.
Eleven women fell pregnant, but two were excluded from the analysis for violating the study guidelines. Others had unprotected sex on days the app identified as high risk for pregnancy.
“We did not have a case where our system gave the wrong ovulation day, or the wrong fertile day,” Rapti said.
The findings translate to an effectiveness rate of 92%, meaning that if 100 women used the Minilab as a contraceptive for one year, eight could expect to become pregnant.
That’s about the same as birth control pills or the contraceptive patch, and more effective than condoms (82%). But it’s far less effective than non-hormonal intrauterine devices (IUDs), sometimes called copper coils (more than 99%).
Notably, the study – which has not yet been published in a peer-reviewed, academic journal – did not include a control or comparison group, so Inne can’t definitively prove that the device is what prevented pregnancy.
Other methods of birth control have also been researched for decades, which means it can be difficult to directly compare Inne’s results.
But if the findings hold up over longer periods of time and with larger groups of people, it would make Minilab equally effective as Natural Cycles, the only other app-based contraceptive on the European market.
Who should use the app
The company said it should not be used by women with irregular menstrual cycles or who had been pregnant or breastfeeding within the previous three months.
Women who want to switch from a hormonal contraceptive – like birth control pills or certain IUDs – should wait at least two months before starting Minilab to allow their hormones to return to natural levels.
Minilab already has thousands of users in Germany, Austria, and Switzerland, Rapti said.
She hopes to eventually add testing for cortisol, the stress hormone, as well as testosterone and vitamins, to help women track their health throughout their lives, not only around pregnancy.
“If you have three or four years of data,” she added, “you can really start building some intelligence”.
See more from MedicalBrief archives:
Doubts cast over accuracy of many popular fertility and pregnancy planning apps
FDA officially approves 'misleading' birth control app