Psychology, Reykjavik University, 101 Reykjavik, Iceland
BMJ Evid Based Med. 2021 Jun;26(3):114-115. doi: 10.1136/bmjebm-2020-111432. Epub 2020 Aug 25.
Caffeine is a habit-forming substance consumed daily by the majority of pregnant women. Accordingly, it is important that women receive sound evidence-based advice about potential caffeine-related harm. This narrative review examines evidence of association between maternal caffeine consumption and negative pregnancy outcomes, and assesses whether current health advice concerning maternal caffeine consumption is soundly based.
Database searches using terms linking caffeine and caffeinated beverages to pregnancy outcomes identified 1261 English language peer-reviewed articles. Screening yielded a total of 48 original observational studies and meta-analyses of maternal caffeine consumption published in the past two decades. The articles reported results for one or more of six major categories of negative pregnancy outcomes: miscarriage, stillbirth, low birth weight and/or small for gestational age, preterm birth, childhood acute leukaemia, and childhood overweight and obesity.
Of 42 separate sets of findings reported in 37 observational studies, 32 indicated significantly increased caffeine-related risk and 10 suggested no or inconclusive associations. Caffeine-related increased risk was reported with moderate to high levels of consistency for all pregnancy outcomes except preterm birth. Of 11 studies reporting 17 meta-analyses, there was unanimity among 14 analyses in finding maternal caffeine consumption to be associated with increased risk for the four outcome categories of miscarriage, stillbirth, low birth weight and/or small for gestational age, and childhood acute leukaemia. The three remaining meta-analyses were also unanimous in reporting absence of a reliable association between maternal caffeine consumption and preterm birth. No meta-analyses were identified for childhood overweight and obesity, although four of five original observational studies reported significant associations linking maternal caffeine consumption to that outcome category.
The substantial majority finding from observational studies and meta-analyses is that maternal caffeine consumption is reliably associated with major negative pregnancy outcomes. Reported findings were robust to threats from potential confounding and misclassification. Among both observational studies and meta-analyses, there were frequent reports of significant dose-response associations suggestive of causation, and frequent reports of no threshold of consumption below which associations were absent. Consequently, current evidence does not support health advice that assumes 'moderate' caffeine consumption during pregnancy is safe. On the contrary, the cumulative scientific evidence supports pregnant women and women contemplating pregnancy being advised to avoid caffeine.
咖啡因是一种在大多数孕妇中每天都会摄入的成瘾物质。因此,重要的是,妇女应获得有关潜在咖啡因相关危害的合理的基于证据的建议。本叙述性综述研究了母体咖啡因摄入与不良妊娠结局之间的关联证据,并评估了当前有关母体咖啡因摄入的健康建议是否有充分依据。
使用将咖啡因和含咖啡因饮料与妊娠结局联系起来的术语对数据库进行搜索,确定了 1261 篇英语同行评审文章。筛选产生了过去二十年中发表的 48 项关于母体咖啡因摄入的原始观察性研究和荟萃分析。这些文章报告了一项或多项以下六种主要不良妊娠结局的结果:流产、死胎、低出生体重和/或小于胎龄儿、早产、儿童急性白血病和儿童超重和肥胖。
在 37 项观察性研究的 42 组独立结果中,有 32 组表明咖啡因相关风险显著增加,有 10 组表明无关联或不确定。除早产外,所有妊娠结局均报告了一致性较高的咖啡因相关风险增加。在报告了 17 项荟萃分析的 11 项研究中,有 14 项分析一致认为母体咖啡因摄入与流产、死胎、低出生体重和/或小于胎龄儿以及儿童急性白血病这四个结局类别风险增加相关。另外三项荟萃分析也一致报告母体咖啡因摄入与早产之间不存在可靠关联。未确定有关儿童超重和肥胖的荟萃分析,但 5 项原始观察性研究中有 4 项报告了母体咖啡因摄入与该结局类别的显著关联。
来自观察性研究和荟萃分析的绝大多数发现是母体咖啡因摄入与主要不良妊娠结局可靠相关。报告的发现对潜在混杂和分类错误的威胁具有稳健性。在观察性研究和荟萃分析中,经常有报告表明存在剂量-反应关系,提示存在因果关系,并且经常报告不存在摄入低于该水平时就不存在关联的情况。因此,目前的证据不支持假设“适度”怀孕期间摄入咖啡因是安全的健康建议。相反,累积的科学证据支持建议孕妇和考虑怀孕的妇女避免咖啡因。