Department of Epidemiology and Population Health, University of Louisville School of Public Health and Information Sciences, Louisville, KT, USA.
Department of Epidemiology, Rollins School of Public Health, Emory University, Atlanta, GA, USA.
Hum Reprod. 2021 Aug 18;36(9):2538-2548. doi: 10.1093/humrep/deab121.
Is increased alcohol intake in different phases of the menstrual cycle associated with fecundability in women?
Heavy intake (>6 drinks/week) of alcoholic beverages in the luteal phase and ovulatory subphase was associated with reduced odds of conception; moderate intake (3-6 drinks/week) during the luteal phase was also associated with reduced fecundability.
Despite strong indications for increased risk of infertility among drinking women with intention to conceive, inconsistencies in previous results point to possible residual confounding, and have not thoroughly investigated timing of drinking and other drinking patterns during the menstrual cycle.
STUDY DESIGN, SIZE, DURATION: Participants in The Mount Sinai Study of Women Office Workers (MSSWOW), a prospective cohort study of fertility, were recruited and followed between 1990 and 1994, and completed daily diaries reporting their alcohol intake (type and number of drinks) for a maximum of 19 months of follow-up (N = 413).
PARTICIPANTS/MATERIALS, SETTING, METHODS: Participants were between 19 and 41 years of age. After completion of baseline surveys, they were asked to record their alcoholic beverage intake as number of drinks of beer, wine, and liquor per day, in addition to other exposures such as caffeine and smoking. Furthermore, they submitted urine samples each month to assess pregnancy. Menstrual cycle phases were calculated using the Knaus-Ognio approach. Discrete survival analysis methods were employed to estimate the association between categories of alcohol intake in each phase of menstrual cycle and fecundability.
In the luteal phase, both moderate drinking (3-6 drinks/week, Fecundability Odds Ratio (FOR)=0.56, CI: 0.31, 0.98) and heavy drinking (>6 drinks/week, FOR = 0.51, CI: 0.29, 0.89) were associated with a reduction in fecundability, compared to non-drinkers. For the follicular phase, heavy drinking in the ovulatory sub-phase (FOR = 0.39, CI: 0.19, 0.72) was similarly associated with reduced fecundability, compared to non-drinkers. For the pre-ovulatory sub-phase, heavy drinking (>6 drinks/week, FOR = 0.54, CI: 0.29, 0.97) was associated with reduction in fecundability, but this association was inconsistent when subjected to sensitivity tests. Each extra day of binge drinking was associated with 19% (FOR = 0.81, CI: 0.63, 0.98), and 41% (FOR = 0.59, CI: 0.33, 0.93) reduction in fecundability for the luteal phase and ovulatory sub-phase respectively, but no association was observed in the pre-ovulatory sub-phase. No meaningful differences in fecundability between beverages were observed in any menstrual phase.
LIMITATIONS, REASONS FOR CAUTION: Patterns of alcohol intake in this cohort suggest a lower average alcohol intake compared to more recent national averages for the same demographic group. Sample sizes were small for some subgroups, resulting in limited power to examine specific beverage types in different phases of the menstrual cycle, or to assess interaction. In addition, the influence of male partner alcohol intake was not assessed, the data relied on self-report, and residual confounding (e.g. unmeasured behaviors correlated with alcohol intake) is a possibility.
Results suggest an inverse association between alcohol and fecundability, and support the relevance of menstrual cycle phases in this link. More specifically, moderate to heavy drinking during the luteal phase, and heavy drinking in the ovulatory window, could disturb the delicate sequence of hormonal events, affecting chances of a successful conception.
STUDY FUNDING/COMPETING INTEREST(S): Authors declare no conflict of interest. This work was supported by the National Institutes of Health grant, R01-HD24618.
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在女性的月经周期的不同阶段,饮酒量的增加是否与生育能力有关?
在黄体期和排卵亚期大量(每周>6 杯)饮酒与受孕几率降低有关;在黄体期适度饮酒(3-6 杯/周)也与生育能力降低有关。
尽管有强烈迹象表明有生育意向的饮酒女性不孕风险增加,但先前结果的不一致表明可能存在残余混杂因素,并且尚未彻底调查月经周期期间饮酒和其他饮酒模式的时间。
研究设计、大小、持续时间:参与者为西奈山妇女办公室工作人员研究(MSSWOW)的前瞻性生育队列研究,于 1990 年至 1994 年期间招募并随访,完成了最多 19 个月的每日日记报告(N=413),记录他们的酒精摄入量(啤酒、葡萄酒和白酒的种类和数量)。
参与者/材料、设置、方法:参与者年龄在 19 至 41 岁之间。完成基线调查后,他们被要求记录他们的酒精饮料摄入量,每天喝多少杯啤酒、葡萄酒和白酒,以及其他暴露因素,如咖啡因和吸烟。此外,他们每月提交尿液样本以评估怀孕情况。使用 Knaus-Ognio 方法计算月经周期阶段。采用离散生存分析方法估计月经周期各阶段不同饮酒量类别与生育能力之间的关联。
在黄体期,与非饮酒者相比,中度饮酒(每周 3-6 杯,生育能力比值(FOR)=0.56,CI:0.31,0.98)和重度饮酒(每周>6 杯,FOR=0.51,CI:0.29,0.89)均与生育能力降低有关。对于卵泡期,在排卵亚期大量饮酒(FOR=0.39,CI:0.19,0.72)与生育能力降低类似,与非饮酒者相比。对于排卵前亚期,大量饮酒(每周>6 杯,FOR=0.54,CI:0.29,0.97)与生育能力降低有关,但在进行敏感性测试时,这种关联不一致。每天狂饮增加 19%(FOR=0.81,CI:0.63,0.98)和 41%(FOR=0.59,CI:0.33,0.93),与黄体期和排卵亚期的生育能力降低有关,但在排卵前亚期没有观察到这种关联。在任何月经周期阶段,不同饮料之间的生育能力差异没有明显意义。
局限性、谨慎的原因:该队列的饮酒模式表明,与同一人口群体的最新全国平均水平相比,平均饮酒量较低。对于一些亚组,样本量较小,导致无法在月经周期的不同阶段评估特定的饮料类型,或评估相互作用。此外,未评估男性伴侣的饮酒量,数据依赖于自我报告,并且存在残余混杂(例如,与饮酒量相关的未测量行为)的可能性。
研究结果表明,酒精与生育能力之间存在反比关系,并支持月经周期阶段在这一联系中的相关性。更具体地说,在黄体期适度到大量饮酒,以及在排卵窗口期大量饮酒,可能会扰乱荷尔蒙事件的微妙顺序,影响成功受孕的机会。
研究资金/利益冲突:作者声明没有利益冲突。这项工作得到了美国国立卫生研究院 R01-HD24618 资助。
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