Showell Marian G, Mackenzie-Proctor Rebecca, Brown Julie, Yazdani Anusch, Stankiewicz Marcin T, Hart Roger J
Obstetrics and Gynaecology, University of Auckland, Park Road Grafton, Auckland, New Zealand.
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2014(12):CD007411. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD007411.pub3. Epub 2014 Dec 15.
Between 30% to 80% of male subfertility cases are considered to be due to the damaging effects of oxidative stress on sperm and 1 man in 20 will be affected by subfertility. Antioxidants are widely available and inexpensive when compared to other fertility treatments and many men are already using these to improve their fertility. It is thought that oral supplementation with antioxidants may improve sperm quality by reducing oxidative stress. Pentoxifylline, a drug that acts like an antioxidant, was also included in this review.
This Cochrane review aimed to evaluate the effectiveness and safety of oral supplementation with antioxidants for subfertile male partners in couples seeking fertility assistance.
We searched the Cochrane Menstrual Disorders and Subfertility Group Specialised Register, CENTRAL, MEDLINE, EMBASE, CINAHL, PsycINFO and AMED databases (from inception until January 2014); trial registers; sources of unpublished literature and reference lists. An updated search was run in August 2014 when potentially eligible studies were placed in 'Studies awaiting assessment'.
We included randomised controlled trials (RCTs) comparing any type or dose of antioxidant supplement (single or combined) taken by the subfertile male partner of a couple seeking fertility assistance with a placebo, no treatment or another antioxidant.
Two review authors independently selected eligible studies, extracted the data and assessed the risk of bias of the included studies. The primary review outcome was live birth; secondary outcomes included clinical pregnancy rates, adverse events, sperm DNA fragmentation, sperm motility and concentration. Data were combined, where appropriate, to calculate pooled odds ratios (ORs) or mean differences (MD) and 95% confidence intervals (CIs). Statistical heterogeneity was assessed using the I(2) statistic. We assessed the overall quality of the evidence for the main outcomes using GRADE methods.
This updated review included 48 RCTs that compared single and combined antioxidants with placebo, no treatment or another antioxidant in a population of 4179 subfertile men. The duration of the trials ranged from 3 to 26 weeks with follow up ranging from 3 weeks to 2 years. The men were aged from 20 to 52 years. Most of the men enrolled in these trials had low total sperm motility and sperm concentration. One study enrolled men after varicocelectomy, one enrolled men with a varicocoele, and one recruited men with chronic prostatitis. Three trials enrolled men who, as a couple, were undergoing in vitro fertilisation (IVF) or intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI) and one trial enrolled men who were part of a couple undergoing intrauterine insemination (IUI). Funding sources were stated by 15 trials. Four of these trials stated that funding was from a commercial source and the remaining 11 obtained funding through non-commercial avenues or university grants. Thirty-three trials did not report any funding sources.A limitation of this review was that in a sense we had included two different groups of trials, those that reported on the use of antioxidants and the effect on live birth and clinical pregnancy, and a second group that reported on sperm parameters as their primary outcome and had no intention of reporting the primary outcomes of this review. We included 25 trials reporting on sperm parameters and only three of these reported on live birth or clinical pregnancy. Other limitations included poor reporting of study methods, imprecision, the small number of trials providing usable data, the small sample size of many of the included studies and the lack of adverse events reporting. The evidence was graded as 'very low' to 'low'. The data were current to 31 January 2014.Live birth: antioxidants may have increased live birth rates (OR 4.21, 95% CI 2.08 to 8.51, P< 0.0001, 4 RCTs, 277 men, I(2) = 0%, low quality evidence). This suggests that if the chance of a live birth following placebo or no treatment is assumed to be 5%, the chance following the use of antioxidants is estimated to be between 10% and 31%. However, this result was based on only 44 live births from a total of 277 couples in four small studies.Clinical pregnancy rate: antioxidants may have increased clinical pregnancy rates (OR 3.43, 95% CI 1.92 to 6.11, P < 0.0001, 7 RCTs, 522 men, I(2) = 0%, low quality evidence). This suggests that if the chance of clinical pregnancy following placebo or no treatment is assumed to be 6%, the chance following the use of antioxidants is estimated at between 11% and 28%. However, there were only seven small studies in this analysis and the quality of the evidence was rated as low.Miscarriage: only three trials reported on this outcome and the event rate was very low. There was insufficient evidence to show whether there was a difference in miscarriage rates between the antioxidant and placebo or no treatment groups (OR 1.74, 95% CI 0.40 to 7.60, P = 0.46, 3 RCTs, 247 men, I(2) = 0%, very low quality evidence). The findings suggest that in a population of subfertile men with an expected miscarriage rate of 2%, use of an antioxidant would result in the risk of a miscarriage lying between 1% and 13%.Gastrointestinal upsets: there was insufficient evidence to show whether there was a difference in gastrointestinal upsets when antioxidants were compared to placebo or no treatment as the event rate was very low (OR 1.60, 95% CI 0.47 to 5.50, P = 0.46, 6 RCTs, 429 men, I(2) = 0%).We were unable to draw any conclusions from the antioxidant versus antioxidant comparison as not enough trials compared the same interventions.
AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: There is low quality evidence from only four small randomised controlled trials suggesting that antioxidant supplementation in subfertile males may improve live birth rates for couples attending fertility clinics. Low quality evidence suggests that clinical pregnancy rates may increase. There is no evidence of increased risk of miscarriage but this is uncertain as the evidence is of very low quality. Data were lacking on other adverse effects. Further large well-designed randomised placebo-controlled trials are needed to clarify these results.
30%至80%的男性不育病例被认为是由于氧化应激对精子的损害作用所致,每20名男性中就有1人会受到不育的影响。与其他生育治疗方法相比,抗氧化剂广泛可得且价格低廉,许多男性已经在使用这些物质来提高生育能力。人们认为口服抗氧化剂可能通过减轻氧化应激来改善精子质量。己酮可可碱,一种具有抗氧化作用的药物,也被纳入了本综述。
本Cochrane综述旨在评估口服抗氧化剂对寻求生育帮助的夫妇中不育男性伴侣的有效性和安全性。
我们检索了Cochrane月经紊乱与不育症专题注册库、CENTRAL、MEDLINE、EMBASE、CINAHL、PsycINFO和AMED数据库(从数据库建立至2014年1月);试验注册库;未发表文献来源和参考文献列表。2014年8月进行了更新检索,当时潜在符合条件的研究被列入“待评估研究”。
我们纳入了随机对照试验(RCT),比较寻求生育帮助的夫妇中不育男性伴侣服用的任何类型或剂量的抗氧化剂补充剂(单一或联合)与安慰剂、不治疗或另一种抗氧化剂。
两位综述作者独立选择符合条件的研究,提取数据并评估纳入研究的偏倚风险。主要综述结局是活产;次要结局包括临床妊娠率、不良事件、精子DNA片段化、精子活力和浓度。在适当情况下合并数据,以计算合并比值比(OR)或平均差(MD)以及9 5%置信区间(CI)。使用I²统计量评估统计异质性。我们使用GRADE方法评估主要结局证据的总体质量。
本次更新综述纳入了48项RCT,这些研究在4179名不育男性人群中比较了单一和联合抗氧化剂与安慰剂、不治疗或另一种抗氧化剂。试验持续时间为3至26周,随访时间为3周 至2年。男性年龄在20至52岁之间。参与这些试验的大多数男性总精子活力和精子浓度较低。一项研究纳入了精索静脉曲张切除术后的男性,一项纳入了患有精索静脉曲张的男性,一项招募了患有慢性前列腺炎的男性。三项试验纳入了作为夫妇正在接受体外受精(IVF)或卵胞浆内单精子注射(ICSI)的男性,一项试验纳入了作为夫妇正在接受宫内人工授精(IUI)的男性。15项试验说明了资金来源。其中四项试验称资金来自商业来源,其余11项通过非商业渠道或大学资助获得资金。33项试验未报告任何资金来源。本综述的一个局限性在于,从某种意义上说,我们纳入了两组不同的试验,一组报告了抗氧化剂的使用及其对活产和临床妊娠的影响,另一组则以精子参数作为主要结局进行报告,且无意报告本综述的主要结局。我们纳入了25项报告精子参数的试验,其中只有三项报告了活产或临床妊娠情况。其他局限性包括研究方法报告不佳、不精确、提供可用数据的试验数量少、许多纳入研究的样本量小以及缺乏不良事件报告。证据等级为“极低”至“低”。数据截至2014年1月31日。
抗氧化剂可能提高了活产率(OR 4.21,95%CI 2.08至8.51,P<0.0001,4项RCT,277名男性,I² = 0%,低质量证据)。这表明,如果假设安慰剂或不治疗后的活产机会为5%,那么使用抗氧化剂后的活产机会估计在10%至31%之间。然而,这一结果仅基于四项小型研究中277对夫妇中的44例活产。
抗氧化剂可能提高了临床妊娠率(OR 3.43,95%CI 1.92至6.11,P<0.0001,7项RCT,522名男性,I² = 0%,低质量证据)。这表明,如果假设安慰剂或不治疗后的临床妊娠机会为6%,那么使用抗氧化剂后的临床妊娠机会估计在11%至2 8%之间。然而,该分析中仅有七项小型研究,证据质量被评为低。
只有三项试验报告了这一结局,且事件发生率非常低。没有足够的证据表明抗氧化剂组与安慰剂组或不治疗组之间的流产率是否存在差异(OR 1.74,95%CI 0.40至7.60,P = 0.46,3项RCT,247名男性,I² = 0%,极低质量证据)。研究结果表明,在预期流产率为2%的不育男性人群中,使用抗氧化剂会使流产风险在1%至13%之间。
没有足够的证据表明抗氧化剂与安慰剂或不治疗相比在胃肠道不适方面是否存在差异,因为事件发生率非常低(OR 1.60,95%CI 0.47至5.50,P = 0.46,6项RCT,429名男性,I² = 0%)。
由于没有足够的试验比较相同的干预措施,我们无法从抗氧化剂与抗氧化剂的比较中得出任何结论。
仅有四项小型随机对照试验提供的低质量证据表明,对不育男性补充抗氧化剂可能会提高前往生育诊所的夫妇的活产率。低质量证据表明临床妊娠率可能会增加。没有证据表明流产风险增加,但由于证据质量极低,这一点尚不确定。缺乏关于其他不良反应的数据。需要进一步开展大型、设计良好的随机安慰剂对照试验来阐明这些结果。