Modifiable socioeconomic and lifestyle risk factors for female infertility in Asia: a systematic review from the population health perspective

Ling-Jun Li Ph.D. , Ashley Chow B.Sc. , Audrey J. Gaskins Ph.D. , Jie Ning Jovin Lee B.Sc. , Mahesh Choolani Ph.D. , Brian K. Kennedy Ph.D. , Zhongwei Huang Ph.D. , Yap Seng Chong M.D. , Cuilin Zhang Ph.D.
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Abstract

Objective

To pinpoint the knowledge gaps and systematically identify modifiable infertility-related socioeconomic and lifestyle risk factors in Asian women, since most studies on female infertility-related risk factors were conducted in the Western populations. This review pinpointed the knowledge gaps and aimed to systematically identify modifiable infertility-related socioeconomic and lifestyle risk factors in Asian women.

Evidence Review

We performed a systematic literature search according to the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses checklist from January 1, 1990, to October 31, 2021, in PubMed, the Web of Science, Embase, and Scopus, using a set of keywords related to our schemes, such as socioeconomics, lifestyle, infertility, and time to pregnancy. We shortlisted a combination of available full texts, English publications, original research articles, human subjects, and nonpregnant women of childbearing age with the intent of conceiving without medical assistance as the population of interest for further screening.

Results

We included 43 Asian studies that reported modifiable socioeconomic and lifestyle risk factors with the following outcomes: time to pregnancy; pregnancy rate; or infertility rate. Similar to the Western populations, female infertility in Asian women was associated with advanced age at marriage, sexual dysfunction, elevated stress levels, and greater adiposity. Interestingly, a higher socioeconomic status in Asian women was positively associated with female infertility, whereas a higher socioeconomic status in their male partners was inversely associated with couple infertility. Regrettably, few publications reported lifestyle risk factors, such as physical activity, dietary food groups, sleep disorders, and substance use.

Conclusion

Asian women may have more infertility-related cultural and dietary diversity, and it is worthy of future research efforts. It is also critical and more effective to tackle the infertility problem in both women and men. Hence, we discussed the imperative need for research efforts in Asian couples.

亚洲女性不孕症的可改变的社会经济和生活方式风险因素:从人口健康角度的系统回顾
由于大多数关于女性不孕相关风险因素的研究都是在西方人群中进行的,目的找出亚洲女性的知识差距,系统地确定可改变的不孕相关社会经济和生活方式风险因素。这篇综述指出了知识差距,旨在系统地确定亚洲女性中可改变的不孕不育相关的社会经济和生活方式风险因素。证据综述我们根据1990年1月1日至2021年10月31日在PubMed、Web of Science、Embase和Scopus上的系统综述和荟萃分析首选报告项目清单,使用一组与我们的计划相关的关键词,如社会经济学、生活方式、不孕不育和怀孕时间,进行了系统的文献检索。我们将可用的全文、英文出版物、原创研究文章、人类受试者和意图在没有医疗援助的情况下怀孕的育龄非孕妇作为感兴趣的人群进行了筛选。结果我们纳入了43项亚洲研究,这些研究报告了可改变的社会经济和生活方式风险因素,结果如下:怀孕时间;妊娠率;或不孕率。与西方人群类似,亚洲女性不孕与结婚年龄大、性功能障碍、压力水平升高和肥胖有关。有趣的是,亚洲女性较高的社会经济地位与女性不孕呈正相关,而男性伴侣较高的社会经济学地位与夫妇不孕呈负相关。令人遗憾的是,很少有出版物报道生活方式风险因素,如体育活动、饮食组、睡眠障碍和药物使用。结论亚洲女性可能存在更多与不孕不育相关的文化和饮食多样性,值得进一步研究。解决女性和男性的不孕不育问题也是至关重要的,也是更有效的。因此,我们讨论了对亚洲夫妇进行研究的迫切需要。
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来源期刊
F&S reviews
F&S reviews Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism, Obstetrics, Gynecology and Women's Health, Urology
CiteScore
3.70
自引率
0.00%
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0
审稿时长
61 days
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