Jensen Tina Kold, Swan Shanna, Jørgensen Niels, Toppari Jorma, Redmon Bruce, Punab Margus, Drobnis Erma Z, Haugen Trine Berit, Zilaitiene Birute, Sparks Amy E, Irvine D Stewart, Wang Christina, Jouannet Pierre, Brazil Charlene, Paasch Uwe, Salzbrunn Andrea, Skakkebæk Niels Erik, Andersson Anna-Maria
Department of Environmental Epidemiology, University of Southern Denmark, Winsløwsparken 17, Odense, Denmark Department of Growth and Reproduction, Rigshospitalet, Blegdamsvej 9, Copenhagen, Denmark
Department of Preventive Medicine, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York, NY, USA.
Hum Reprod. 2014 Aug;29(8):1801-9. doi: 10.1093/humrep/deu118. Epub 2014 Jun 3.
Is there an association between alcohol intake and semen quality and serum reproductive hormones among healthy men from the USA and Europe?
Moderate alcohol intake is not adversely associated with semen quality in healthy men, whereas it was associated with higher serum testosterone levels.
High alcohol intake has been associated with a wide range of diseases. However, few studies have examined the correlation between alcohol and reproductive function and most have been conducted in selected populations of infertile men or have a small sample size and the results have been contradictory.
STUDY DESIGN, SIZE, DURATION: A coordinated international cross-sectional study among 8344 healthy men. A total of 1872 fertile men aged 18-45 years (with pregnant partners) from four European cities and four US states, and 6472 young men (most with unknown fertility) aged 18-28 years from the general population in six European countries were recruited.
PARTICIPANTS/MATERIALS, SETTING, METHODS: The men were recruited using standardized protocols. A semen analysis was performed and men completed a questionnaire on health and lifestyle, including their intake of beer, wine and liquor during the week prior to their visit. Semen quality (semen volume, sperm concentration, percentage motile and morphologically normal sperm) and serum reproductive hormones (FSH, LH, testosterone, sex hormone-binding globulin, and inhibin B and free testosterone) were examined.
The participation rate for our populations was 20-30%. We found no consistent association between any semen variable and alcohol consumption, which was low/moderate in this group (median weekly intake 8 units), either for total consumption or consumption by type of alcohol. However, we found a linear association between total alcohol consumption and total or free testosterone in both groups of men. Young and fertile men who consumed >20 units of alcohol per week had, respectively, 24.6 pmol/l (95% confidence interval 16.3-32.9) and 19.7 pmol/l (7.1-32.2) higher free testosterone than men with a weekly intake between 1 and 10 units. Alcohol intake was not significantly associated with serum inhibin B, FSH or LH levels in either group of men. The study is the largest of its kind and has sufficient power to detect changes in semen quality and reproductive hormones.
LIMITATIONS, REASONS FOR CAUTION: The participation rate was low, but higher than in most previous semen quality studies. In addition, the study was cross-sectional and the men were asked to recall their alcohol intake in the previous week, which was used as a marker of intake up to 3 months before. If consumption in that week differed from the typical weekly intake and the intake 3 months earlier, misclassification of exposure may have occurred. However, the men were unaware of their semen quality when they responded to the questions about alcohol intake. Furthermore, we cannot exclude that our findings are due to unmeasured confounders, including diet, exercise, stress, occupation and risk-taking behavior.
Our study suggests that moderate alcohol intake is not adversely associated with semen quality in healthy men, whereas it was associated with higher serum testosterone levels which may be due to a changed metabolism of testosterone in the liver. Healthy men may therefore be advised that occasional moderate alcohol intake may not harm their reproductive health; we cannot address the risk of high alcohol consumption of longer duration or binge drinking on semen quality and male reproductive hormones.
STUDY FUNDING/COMPETING INTERESTS: All funding sources were non-profitable and sponsors of this study played no role in the study design, in data collection, analysis, or interpretation, or in the writing of the article. The authors have no conflicts of interest.
在美国和欧洲的健康男性中,酒精摄入量与精液质量及血清生殖激素之间是否存在关联?
适度饮酒与健康男性的精液质量无不良关联,然而,它与较高的血清睾酮水平相关。
大量饮酒与多种疾病相关。然而,很少有研究探讨酒精与生殖功能之间的相关性,且大多数研究是在特定的不育男性群体中进行的,或者样本量较小,结果相互矛盾。
研究设计、规模、持续时间:一项针对8344名健康男性的国际协作横断面研究。招募了来自四个欧洲城市和四个美国州的1872名18 - 45岁的可育男性(其伴侣已怀孕),以及来自六个欧洲国家普通人群的6472名18 - 28岁的年轻男性(大多数生育能力未知)。
参与者/材料、地点、方法:采用标准化方案招募男性。进行精液分析,男性完成一份关于健康和生活方式的问卷,包括他们在就诊前一周啤酒、葡萄酒和烈酒的摄入量。检测精液质量(精液量、精子浓度、活动精子百分比和形态正常精子百分比)和血清生殖激素(促卵泡生成素、促黄体生成素、睾酮、性激素结合球蛋白、抑制素B和游离睾酮)。
我们研究人群的参与率为20% - 30%。我们未发现任何精液变量与该组低/适度酒精消费(每周摄入量中位数为8单位)之间存在一致关联,无论是总消费量还是按酒精类型的消费量。然而,我们发现两组男性的总酒精消费量与总睾酮或游离睾酮之间存在线性关联。每周饮酒超过20单位的年轻男性和可育男性,其游离睾酮水平分别比每周摄入量在1至10单位之间的男性高24.6 pmol/l(95%置信区间16.3 - 32.9)和19.7 pmol/l(7.1 - 32.2)。两组男性的酒精摄入量与血清抑制素B、促卵泡生成素或促黄体生成素水平均无显著关联。该研究是同类研究中规模最大的,有足够的能力检测精液质量和生殖激素的变化。
局限性、谨慎原因:参与率较低,但高于大多数以往的精液质量研究。此外,该研究为横断面研究,男性被要求回忆前一周的酒精摄入量,而这被用作长达3个月前摄入量的指标。如果该周的消费量与典型的每周摄入量以及3个月前的摄入量不同,可能会发生暴露误分类。然而,男性在回答关于酒精摄入量的问题时并不知道自己的精液质量。此外,我们不能排除我们的发现是由于未测量的混杂因素,包括饮食、运动、压力、职业和冒险行为。
我们的研究表明,适度饮酒与健康男性的精液质量无不良关联,然而,它与较高的血清睾酮水平相关,这可能是由于肝脏中睾酮代谢的改变。因此,对于健康男性,可建议偶尔适度饮酒可能不会损害其生殖健康;我们无法探讨长期高酒精消费或暴饮对精液质量和男性生殖激素的风险。
研究资金/利益冲突:所有资金来源均为非营利性,本研究的赞助商在研究设计、数据收集、分析或解释以及文章撰写过程中均未发挥作用。作者不存在利益冲突。