Andrew Peel, Nicola Mathews, Andrew D Vincent, David Jesudason, Gary Wittert, Nicole O McPherson
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引用次数: 0
摘要
目的:本综述将确定各种旨在减轻肥胖男性体重的健康干预措施(改变生活方式、减肥手术、药物治疗)是否与生育指标的改善有关。该综述还将确定通过这些方法减轻体重的程度是否与生育指标的改善有关:背景:目前的孕前指南为肥胖男性提供的信息有限。对男性改变生活方式的小规模研究与精子质量的改善有关,而减肥手术与精子质量的改善无关。要优化男性生育能力,就必须确定不同干预措施的益处以及与体重减轻之间的关系:研究对象为体重超重(体重指数大于 25 kg/m2)或肥胖(体重指数大于 30 kg/m2)、年龄小于 50 岁的男性。研究对象将接受干预,以改善健康状况或减轻体重,干预方式包括改变生活方式、减肥手术或药物治疗。研究结果将包括受孕时间、受孕率、辅助生殖结果和精液质量指标。二次分析将确定体重减轻程度是否与病情改善程度相关:本综述将采用 JBI 方法对病因和风险进行系统综述。检索的数据库包括 PubMed、Embase (Ovid)、Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials、Web of Science 和 Scopus。未翻译成英文的文章将被排除在外。将使用 JBI 关键评估工具对方法学质量进行评估。数据提取将使用评审员开发的标准化工具。在可能的情况下,将进行统计荟萃分析,以综合类似方法的结果:ProMPERCO CRD 42022349665。
Impact of bariatric surgery, lifestyle change, and pharmacotherapy on fertility in men with obesity: a systematic review protocol.
Objective: This review will determine whether various health interventions designed to reduce weight (lifestyle change, bariatric surgery, pharmacotherapy) in men with obesity are associated with improved fertility markers. The review will also establish whether the degree of weight loss achieved through these methods is associated with improvement.
Introduction: Current preconception guidelines provide limited information for men with obesity. Small studies implementing lifestyle changes in men are associated with improvement in sperm quality, whereas bariatric surgery has not been associated with improvements in sperm quality. Determining the benefit of different interventions and the relationship to weight lost is necessary to optimize male fertility.
Inclusion criteria: The population will be men younger than 50 years with overweight (BMI >25 kg/m 2 ) or obesity (BMI >30 kg/m 2 ). The exposure of interest will be an intervention undertaken to improve health or reduce weight, categorized as lifestyle change, bariatric surgery, or pharmacotherapy. Outcomes will include time to conception, fecundity rate, assisted reproduction outcomes, and semen quality measures. Secondary analysis will determine whether degree of weight loss achieved is associated with degree of improvement.
Methods: This review will follow the JBI methodology for systematic reviews of etiology and risk. Databases to be searched will include PubMed, Embase (Ovid), Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials, Web of Science Core Collection, and Scopus. Articles not published or translated into English will be excluded. Methodological quality will be assessed using the JBI critical appraisal tools. Data will be extracted using a tool developed by the reviewers. Statistical meta-analysis will be performed where possible to synthesize outcomes of similar methods.