Coffee and cake lowers IVF success
7 July BBC
Regular trips to the coffee machine or having a diet packed with
saturated fat have been linked to lower IVF success rates by fertility
experts.
One study suggested heavy coffee drinking was as bad as smoking for
IVF success rates.
Another showed saturated fats lowered the number of eggs that could
be used in IVF, while a 'Mediterranean diet' boosted birth rates.Experts
say lifestyle affects both the chances of IVF and natural conception.
Dr Ulrik Kesmodel, a consultant gynaecologist, presented data at the
European Society for Human Reproduction and Embryology (ESHRE) meeting
in Turkey.It involved 3,959 women having IVF at the Aarhus University
Hospital in Denmark.
One in 20 women were drinking more than five cups of coffee a day.
This group of women were half as likely to become pregnant as those who
did not drink coffee.The researchers said this was as damaging to the
chances of a successful pregnancy as smoking.Dr Kesmodel said: "It does
seem reasonable, based on our results and the evidence we have about
coffee consumption during pregnancy, that women should not drink more
than five cups of coffee a day when having IVF."It is not known whether
drinking tea or other caffeinated drinks would have the same effect.Dr
Kesmodel said: "The assumption is that caffeine is the culprit although
we don't really know. There are so many substances within coffee."
The British Coffee Association said a there was no need to completely
cut caffeine from the diet as there were "no harmful effects" with low
levels of consumption.Its executive director, Dr Euan Paul, said: "For
pregnant women or those trying to conceive, an upper limit of 200mg of
caffeine per day is perfectly safe."This is the equivalent of 2 to 3
cups of coffee."
A separate analysis by the Harvard School of Public Health, in the
US, investigated how differences in 147 women's diets affected IVF.Diets
high in saturated fats, such as those from butter, fatty meats and
cheese, lowered the number of eggs a women produced for IVF.
Meanwhile a diet high in unsaturated fats, such as olive oil and
avocados, was associated with an increase in the live birth rate,
although there were too few women in the study to say exactly how big
the increase was.
The lead researcher Dr Jorge Chavarro said that women should consider
adapting their diet anyway as it is already considered to be good for
cardiovascular disease and Type 2 diabetes.
He said: "We know that these types of diets are generally healthy and
from that perspective I think it makes total sense not only for women
undergoing assisted reproduction, but anyone, to follow these kinds of
diets."Richard Kennedy, the secretary of the International Federation of
Fertility Societies, said that "many" lifestyle choices made it harder
to conceive both naturally and through IVF.
He said: "This work reinforces the need for a good lifestyle for
those trying to have a baby; eat and drink in moderation, and don't
smoke." |