CHICAGO — Pregnant women who drink two or
more cups of coffee a day have twice the risk of having a
miscarriage as those who avoid caffeine, US researchers said on
Monday.
They said the study provides strong evidence
that high doses of caffeine during pregnancy – 200 milligrams or
more per day or the equivalent of two cups of coffee –
significantly increase the risk of miscarriage.
And they said the research may finally put to
rest conflicting reports about the link between caffeine
consumption and miscarriage.
"Women who are pregnant or are actively
seeking to become pregnant should stop drinking coffee for three
months or hopefully throughout pregnancy," said Dr. De-Kun Li of
Kaiser Permanente Division of Research, whose study appears in
the American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology.
"There has been a lot of uncertainty about
this," Li said in a telephone interview. "There was no firm
advice from professional societies to say what a pregnant woman
should do about caffeine intake."
Li said anywhere from 15 to 18 studies have
found a link between caffeine use during pregnancy and
miscarriage. But that association has been clouded by the fact
that many pregnant women avoid caffeine because it makes them
nauseated, which could skew the results.
Li and colleagues took pains to control for
that possibility. Their study involved 1,063 pregnant women who
were members of the Kaiser Permanente health plan in San
Francisco from October 1996 through October 1998. Women in the
group never changed their caffeine consumption during pregnancy.
What they found was women who consumed the
equivalent of two or more cups of regular coffee or five
12-ounce cans of caffeinated soda – were twice as likely to
miscarry as pregnant women who avoided caffeine.
This risk appeared to be related to the
caffeine, rather than other chemicals in coffee, because they
also saw an increased risk when the caffeine was consumed in
soda, tea, and hot chocolate.
Li said many researchers think caffeine is
harmful because it stresses the fetus’ immature metabolism. It
may also decrease blood flow in the placenta, which could harm
the fetus.
"To me, the safe dose is zero," Li said. "If
you really have to drink coffee, try to limit it to one cup or
at the most two cups." Or better yet, switch to decaffeinated
beverages, he added.
Based on the findings, Dr. Tracy Flanagan,
director of women’s health at Kaiser Permanente Northern
California, said pregnant women should think about limiting
coffee to one cup a day, and they might want to cut it out
entirely.
"So many causes of miscarriage are not
controllable," she said in a telephone interview. "This is an
opportunity to do something active." – Reuters