# Longitudinal Trajectories and Psychosocial Predictors of Postpartum Sexual Dysfunction from Early Pregnancy to 12 Months Postpartum

**Authors:** Aris Boarta, Adrian Gluhovschi, Marius Lucian Craina, Carmen Ioana Marta, Bogdan Dumitriu, Ioana Denisa Socol, Madalina Ioana Sorop, Bogdan Sorop

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/medicina62030541 · Medicina · 2026-03-14

## TL;DR

This study tracks sexual function in women from pregnancy to one year postpartum and finds that depression and body image issues are key predictors of ongoing sexual dysfunction.

## Contribution

The study provides longitudinal data on postpartum sexual dysfunction and identifies psychosocial predictors more influential than physical factors.

## Key findings

- Sexual function scores dropped significantly postpartum and only partially recovered by one year.
- Depressive symptoms strongly correlated with lower sexual function scores.
- A psychosocial model predicted dysfunction with high accuracy (AUC 0.9).

## Abstract

Background and Objectives: Pregnancy and the postpartum period profoundly affect female sexual function, yet longitudinal data integrating obstetric and psychosocial domains are scarce. We aimed to chart sexual-function trajectories from early pregnancy to 12 months postpartum and identify predictors of persistent dysfunction. Materials and Methods: In this single-center prospective cohort, 187 pregnant women were eligible to complete the FSFI at three trimesters and at 6–8 weeks, 3 months, and 6–12 months postpartum, plus postpartum PHQ-9, WHOQOL-BREF, and body-image scales. Associations with FSFI-defined dysfunction (FSFI < 26.55) and continuous FSFI were examined, of which 90 women were included for having documented dysfunction. Results: Mean FSFI declined from 27.4 ± 3.9 (first trimester) to a nadir of 20.1 ± 4.2 at 6–8 weeks postpartum, with partial recovery to 25.5 ± 4.0 at 6–12 months (p < 0.001). Depressive symptoms were higher in women with dysfunction (PHQ-9 8.8 ± 3.3 vs. 6.7 ± 3.5; p < 0.001) and correlated inversely with FSFI (r = −0.39; p < 0.001). A multivariable model explained 19% of FSFI variance, with each 1 SD PHQ-9 increase predicting a 1.2-point FSFI decrease (p = 0.005). Body-image disturbance exerted a partially PHQ-9-mediated effect, and three FSFI trajectory clusters showed postpartum dysfunction rates from 28.6% to 89.7%. A combined psychosocial prediction model achieved an AUC of 0.9 with a sensitivity and specificity of 0.8. Conclusions: Postpartum sexual dysfunction was common and persisted in many women at one year; depressive symptoms, body image, and psychological quality of life were more influential than mode of birth, breastfeeding, or pelvic-floor symptoms.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** dysfunction (MESH:D006331), Depressive symptoms (MESH:D003866), Sexual Dysfunction (MESH:D012735), Body-image disturbance (MESH:D057215), pelvic (MESH:D034161)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

2 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC13028179/full.md

## References

26 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC13028179/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC13028179