Sweet Drinks, Sour Consequences: The Impact of Sugar-Sweetened Beverages on Sperm Health, a Narrative Review
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. Sugar-Sweetened Beverages
1.2. Defining Sperm Health and Fecundability
- Volume: ≥1.4 mL
- Total count: ≥39 million
- Motility: ≥42%
- Viability: ≥54%
- Morphology: ≥4%
- Concentration: ≥15 million/mL
1.3. Knowledge Gaps
1.4. Aims of This Paper
2. Methods
2.1. Inclusion and Exclusion Criteria
2.2. Confounding Factors
2.3. Literature Search and Screening of Studies
3. Results
3.1. General Trends in the Literature
3.2. SSBs and Sperm Parameters
- (I)
- Semen Volume
- (II)
- Sperm Concentration
- (III)
- Total Sperm Count
- (IV)
- Sperm Motility
- (V)
- Sperm Morphology
3.3. Association Between SSB and Hormone Levels
3.4. Association Between SSB and Fecundability
3.5. Inconclusive Findings
4. Discussion
4.1. Impact of SSBs on Sperm Health
4.2. Mechanisms Underlying Sperm Damage
- (I)
- Oxidative Stress and DNA damage
- (II)
- Hormonal Disruption
- (III)
- Environmental Pollutants and Additional Oxidative Insults
4.3. Consequences on Fertility Outcomes
- (I)
- Sperm Concentration and Count
- (II)
- Sperm Motility and Morphology
- (III)
- Fecundability and Clinical Outcomes
4.4. Artificial Sweeteners
4.5. Subgroup Variability
4.6. Limitations and Knowledge Gaps
4.7. Future Directions
4.8. Recommendations
5. Conclusions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Author (Year) | Study Period | Study Design | Population | Exposure (SSBs) | Outcome Measure | Key Findings | Limitations |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Jensen et al. (2010) [24] | 2001–2006 | Cross-sectional Study | The Netherlands (n = 2554 males) Aged ≥ 18 | Bottles of Coca Cola (0.5 L) in a week | Semen volume, sperm concentration, total sperm count, morphology | No association of coffee, tea, chocolate beverages, or diet soft drinks with semen quality Only Coca Cola consumption is associated with a significant reduction in semen quality Only Coca Cola affected semen quality—it could have been sugar in the Coca Cola affecting semen | The study was for caffeine exposure Found that a high-quantity consumers of Coca Cola/caffeine have unhealthy lifestyles, which may confound the results The study population mainly was Caucasian |
Chiu et al. (2014) [25] | 2009–2010 | Cross-sectional Study | United States (n = 189 males) Aged 18–22 | Carbonated SSBs with caffeine Carbonated SSBs without caffeine Non-carbonated SSBs Fruit juices Servings (12 oz)—never 6 or more servings a day | Sperm motility, sperm concentration, morphology, ejaculate volume, reproductive hormones | Intake of SSBs is related to lower sperm motility (total and progressive) Slightly lower FSH with higher SSB intake | Not possible to determine to what extent the observed relations with sperm motility might translate into fertility |
Liu et al. (2015) [26] | 2008–2013 | Cross-sectional Study | Taiwan (n = 7282 males) Aged ≥ 18 | Cake or cookies Additional sugars Sweetened beverages <1/week 1–3/week 4–6/week 1/day >2/day | Sperm concentration, total sperm motility, progressive motility, normal sperm morphology | Highly sweet snacks and sugar-sweetened drinks are associated with lower sperm concentration and a lower percentage of normal sperm morphology | No subdivision of sugar-sweetened drinks into separate categories Snacks and SSBs combined into one category |
Yang et al. (2015) [27] | 2013–2014 | Cohort Study | China (n = 796 males) Median age = 20 | Milk tea Coca Cola Never <3 cups/week ≥3 cups/week | Semen appearance, semen volume, sperm morphology, sperm concentration, sperm motility, serum sex hormones | Coca Cola consumption is associated with decreased semen volume | The population studied was mainly Han Chinese Studied only Coca Cola—contains caffeine which may be a confounder |
Wesselink et al. (2016) [28] | Cohort Study | North America (n = 662) Aged ≥ 21 | Caffeinated soda Energy drinks 0, <1, 1, >2 cans/day | Fecundability | Both soda and energy drink intake are associated with reduced fecundability | The study was conducted for caffeine Energy drinks were not separated into sugar vs. diet drinks | |
Hatch et al. (2018) [29] | 2013–2017 | Cohort Study | North America (n = 1045) Aged ≥ 21 | Sugar-sweetened soda Diet soda Energy drinks Sweetened sports drinks Fruit juices No. of 12-ounce servings per week | Fecundability | SSB is associated with reduced fecundability Diet soda did not affect fecundability The largest reduction seen was in men who consumed 7 or more energy drinks per week | Lacked info on male dietary factors that can confound results—high sugar foods |
Nassan et al. (2021) [30] | 2008–2017 | Cross-sectional Study | Netherlands (n = 2935 males) Median age = 19 | Intake of SSBs assessed via a validated food frequency questionnaire (FFQ) The median SSB intake in the highest category was 1.1 servings/day (~220 mL/day) | Semen parameters: sperm concentration, total sperm count, motility, and morphology Serum reproductive hormones: inhibin-B, FSH, testosterone, and others | SSB consumption was associated with lower sperm concentration, lower total sperm count, and a reduced inhibin-B/FSH ratio (impaired spermatogenesis) Possible mechanisms: oxidative stress and disrupted hypothalamic–pituitary–gonadal axis due to insulin resistance and cellular aging effects | Cross-sectional design limits causal inference Self-reported SSB intake may introduce reporting biases A single semen sample per participant may not reflect long-term sperm quality |
Efrat et al. (2022) [31] | 2012–2015 | Cross-sectional Study | Israel (n= 593 males) Aged 18–55 years | (1) Soft drink consumption (SoftD, 1 drink = 8 fl/oz) (2) Sugar content in consumed food products | Sperm parameters: volume, sperm concentration, total sperm count, percentage of motility, percentage of normal morphology | The sperm concentration and total sperm count are negatively associated with the consumption of SSBs Possible mechanisms: increased oxidative stress | Cross-sectional study design, unable to demonstrate cause and effect, and unable to completely rule out the possibility of residual confounders |
Kiwitt-Cárdenas (2022) [32] | 2010–2011 | Cross-sectional Study | Spain (n = 209) Aged 18–23 | The intake of SSBs assessed via a validated food frequency questionnaire (FFQ) Carbonated SSBs with caffeine Carbonated SSBs without caffeine Sugar-free carbonated SSBs Bottled fruit juice One serving = 330 mL | Ejaculate volume, sperm motility, sperm concentration, total sperm count, sperm morphology Reproductive hormones: LH, FSH, sex hormone-binding globulin, testosterone, inhibin B | Higher intake of SSB is associated with higher percentage of normal sperm morphology and increased serum levels of estradiol. No statistically significant associations with other semen parameters or other reproductive hormones | Cross-sectional study, unable to demonstrate cause and effect Only one sample per participant was analysed |
Meldgaard et al. (2022) [33] | 2017–2019 | Cross-sectional Study | Netherlands (n = 5697 males) Aged 18 | Sugar-sweetened and artificially sweetened beverages Moderate (≥3 days a week) and infrequent (<3 days a week) consumption | Sample volume, sperm concentration, total sperm count, total motility, morphology | Neither the consumption of sugar-sweetened nor artificially sweetened beverages was strongly associated with semen volume, sperm concentration, total motility, and total sperm count in this study | The cross-sectional study design was unable to demonstrate cause and effect Self-reported via recall of consumption, which may lead to measurement error of exposure |
Joseph et al. (2024) [34] | 2015–2022 | Cohort Study | North America (n = 690 males) Aged ≥ 21 | Sugar-sweetened soda, energy drinks, fruit juice, and sports drinks Calculated total SSB consumption by summing up weekly intake values of sugar-sweetened sodas, sugar-sweetened energy drinks, fruit juices, and sports drinks | Self-evaluation of semen quality using an at-home semen testing system Semen volume, sperm concentration, total sperm count, motility, total motile sperm count | SSB intake was inversely associated with all five semen parameters | Potential for exposure misclassification given that we evaluated SSB consumption at baseline and spermatogenesis takes approximately 74 days to occur Although adjusted for several covariates, unmeasured or residual confounding from lifestyle and behavioural factors (e.g., healthy diet) remains possible Measured semen quality using an at-home semen testing kit rather than the gold standard of laboratory assessment |
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Win, W.K.Y.; Wong, M.W.; Benny, P.; Huang, Z. Sweet Drinks, Sour Consequences: The Impact of Sugar-Sweetened Beverages on Sperm Health, a Narrative Review. Nutrients 2025, 17, 1733. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu17101733
Win WKY, Wong MW, Benny P, Huang Z. Sweet Drinks, Sour Consequences: The Impact of Sugar-Sweetened Beverages on Sperm Health, a Narrative Review. Nutrients. 2025; 17(10):1733. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu17101733
Chicago/Turabian StyleWin, Winnie Khine Yi, Maverick Wenhao Wong, Paula Benny, and Zhongwei Huang. 2025. "Sweet Drinks, Sour Consequences: The Impact of Sugar-Sweetened Beverages on Sperm Health, a Narrative Review" Nutrients 17, no. 10: 1733. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu17101733
APA StyleWin, W. K. Y., Wong, M. W., Benny, P., & Huang, Z. (2025). Sweet Drinks, Sour Consequences: The Impact of Sugar-Sweetened Beverages on Sperm Health, a Narrative Review. Nutrients, 17(10), 1733. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu17101733