| Literature DB >> 32546170 |
Fan-Long Bu1, Xue Feng2, Xiao-Ying Yang3, Jun Ren4, Hui-Juan Cao5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: For a long time, the relationship between caffeine consumption and infertility in the general population is unclear, this study is aimed to systematically review the evidence from any type of controlled clinical studies to explore whether caffeine intake is a risk factor for human infertility.Entities:
Keywords: Caffeine; Coffee; Infertility; Meta-analysis; Systematic review
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32546170 PMCID: PMC7298863 DOI: 10.1186/s12905-020-00973-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Womens Health ISSN: 1472-6874 Impact factor: 2.809
Fig. 1Flow chart for included studies
Characteristics and results of included studies concerned caffeine intake with infertility
| Study ID | Study Type | Participants | Exposure (Caffeine/coffee) | Comparison | Outcomes | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gender | Age | Sample size | Disease | Relative Risk(95%CI) | ||||
| Buiatti 1984 | Case-Control Study | Men | 20-54y | 239 | ≥100 mg/d | 0 mg/d | Azoospermia/oligospermia | OR = 0.91 (0.46–1.82) |
| Grodstein 1993 | Case-Control Study | Women | Unclear | 4883 | E1 100-167mg/d; E2 168-233mg/d; E3>233mg/d | <100 mg/d | Primary infertility | OR1 = 1.00(0.79–1.25); OR2 = 1.16(0.94–1.42); OR3 = 1.36(1.16–1.60) a,b |
| Prazzini 1993 | Case-Control Study | Men | Median 31-33y | 216 | E1 200-300 mg/d; E2 ≥ 400 mg/d | 0-100 mg/d | Infertile men with dyspermia | OR1 = 1.7(0.8–3.7); OR2 = 5.4 (2.4–12.6) c |
| Liv2018 | Cohort Study | Women | 20-29y | 7574 | Coffee: E1 ≤ 200 ml/d E2 200-400 ml/d E3 ≥ 500 ml/d | 0 ml/d | Infertile women | HR1 = 0.86(0.70–1.06); HR2 = 0.88(0.73–1.06); HR3 = 0.89(0.72–1.10); |
Tea: E1 ≤ 200 ml/d E2 200-400 ml/d E3 ≥ 500 ml/d | 0 ml/d | HR1 = 1.10(0.84–1.44); HR2 = 1.10(0.84–1.46); HR3 = 1.15(0.87–1.53); | ||||||
Caffeined: E1 ≤ 1-168 mg/d E2 169-333mg/d E3 334-579mg/d E4 ≥ 580 mg/d | 0 mg/d | HR1 = 0.93(0.58–1.49); HR2 = 0.91(0.57–1.47); HR3 = 0.97(0.60–1.55); HR4 = 0.93(0.58–1.50)e | ||||||
Note: E Exposure, OR Odds ratio, HR Hazard ratio, CI Confidence interval
a This study classified the participants into 5 groups according to their primary disease and calculated the estimate effect of them respectively. Details of the information were reported in the main text of this review
b OR were adjusted for center, age, lifetime number of sexual partners, current and former cigarette smoking, and alcohol intake
c Age-Adjust OR
d Total caffeine calculated from consumption of both coffee and tea
e Educational level (≤9, 10–11 or ≥ 12 years of schooling), Smoking (yes or no), Marital status (married/cohabiting or single), Weekly alcohol intake and Year of birth-Adjust HR.
Fig. 2Quality evaluation of the included studies
Fig. 3Evidence Mapping of caffeine intake for infertility. a Caffeine intake > 100 mg/d vs ≤100 mg/d. b Caffeine intake > 200 mg/d vs ≤100 mg/d. c Caffeine intake > 400 mg/d vs ≤100 mg/d
Fig. 4Forest plot of different dose caffeine intake and risk of infertility
GRADE Summary of Findings Table
| Caffeine intake | Large effect | Plausible confounding | Dose-response gradient | Anticipated absolute effectsa (95% CI) | Relative effect (95%CI) | No of Participants (studies) | Certainty of the evidence (GRADE) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Risk with non caffeine | Risk with caffeine | |||||||
| Low dose (≤100 mg/d) | No | No | No | 197 per 1000 | 189 per 1000 (161 to 221) | OR 0.95 (0.78–1.16) | 4627 (2case-control studies + 1 cohort study) | ⊕ ⊕ ○○ Low |
| Medium dose (≥200 mg/d) | No | No | No | 194 per 1000 | 215 per 1000 (143 to 309) | OR 1.14 (0.69–1.86) | 5353 (2case-control studies + 1 cohort study) | ⊕ ⊕ ○○ Low |
| High dose (≥400 mg/d) | No | No | No | 186 per 1000 | 298 per 1000 (60 to 736) | OR 1.86 (0.28–12.22) | 2435 (1case-control study + 1 cohort study) | ⊕ ⊕ ○○ Low |
aThe risk in the intervention group (and its 95% confidence interval) is based on the assumed risk in the comparison group and the relative effect of the intervention (and its 95% CI)
CI Confidence interval, OR Odds ratio
GRADE Working Group grades of evidence
High certainty: We are very confident that the true effect lies close to that of the estimate of the effect
Moderate certainty: We are moderately confident in the effect estimate: The true effect is likely to be close to the estimate of the effect, but there is a possibility that it is substantially different
Low certainty: Our confidence in the effect estimate is limited: The true effect may be substantially different from the estimate of the effect
Very low certainty: We have very little confidence in the effect estimate: The true effect is likely to be substantially different from the estimate of effect