Combined hormonal contraceptive use is not protective against musculoskeletal conditions or injuries: a systematic review with data from 5 million females

  • City Sport + Physiotherapy Clinic, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.
  • University of British Columbia ROR
  • Vancouver Hospital and Health Sciences Centre ROR
  • Tall Tree Physiotherapy and Health Centre, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.
  • University of Alberta ROR

British Journal of Sports Medicine, 57(18), 1195-1202

DOI 10.1136/bjsports-2022-106519 PMID 37225254

Abstract

Objective

Assess the association between combined hormonal contraceptives (CHC) use and musculoskeletal tissue pathophysiology, injuries or conditions.

Design

Systematic review with semiquantitative analyses and certainty of evidence assessment, guided by the Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development and Evaluation approach.

Data Sources: MEDLINE, EMBASE, CENTRAL, SPORTDiscus, CINAHL searched from inception to April 2022. ELIGIBILITY: Intervention and cohort studies that assessed the association between new or ongoing use of CHC and an outcome of musculoskeletal tissue pathophysiology, injury or condition in postpubertal premenopausal females.

Results

Across 50 included studies, we assessed the effect of CHC use on 30 unique musculoskeletal outcomes (75% bone related). Serious risk of bias was judged present in 82% of studies, with 52% adequately adjusting for confounding. Meta-analyses were not possible due to poor outcome reporting, and heterogeneity in estimate statistics and comparison conditions. Based on semiquantitative synthesis, there is low certainty evidence that CHC use was associated with elevated future fracture risk (risk ratio 1.02-1.20) and total knee arthroplasty (risk ratio 1.00-1.36). There is very low certainty evidence of unclear relationships between CHC use and a wide range of bone turnover and bone health outcomes. Evidence about the effect of CHC use on musculoskeletal tissues beyond bone, and the influence of CHC use in adolescence versus adulthood, is limited.

Conclusion

Given a paucity of high certainty evidence that CHC use is protective against musculoskeletal pathophysiology, injury or conditions, it is premature and inappropriate to advocate, or prescribe CHC for these purposes. PROSPERO REGISTRATION NUMBER: This review was registered on PROSPERO CRD42021224582 on 8 January 2021.

Topics

combined hormonal contraceptives musculoskeletal injury systematic review, oral contraceptive fracture risk premenopausal women, Prior JC contraceptive bone health musculoskeletal, hormonal contraception ACL injury sports medicine, CHC bone turnover markers premenopausal females, combined hormonal contraceptive fracture risk ratio, contraceptive use knee arthroplasty risk women, hormonal contraception musculoskeletal tissue pathophysiology, oral contraceptive pill bone density adolescence adulthood, systematic review GRADE contraceptive musculoskeletal outcomes
PMID 37225254 37225254 DOI 10.1136/bjsports-2022-106519 10.1136/bjsports-2022-106519

Cite this article

White, L., Losciale, J. M., Squier, K., Guy, S., Scott, A., Prior, J. C., & Whittaker, J. L. (2023). Combined hormonal contraceptive use is not protective against musculoskeletal conditions or injuries: a systematic review with data from 5 million females. *British journal of sports medicine*, *57*(18), 1195-1202. https://doi.org/10.1136/bjsports-2022-106519