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REVIEW article

Front. Psychol., 28 October 2022
Sec. Quantitative Psychology and Measurement
This article is part of the Research Topic Rising Stars In: Quantitative Psychology and Measurement 2021 View all 9 articles

Psychological assessment in infertility: A systematic review and meta-analysis

\r\nSayed Abolfazl TavousiSayed Abolfazl Tavousi1Mohaddeseh BehjatiMohaddeseh Behjati2Alireza MilajerdiAlireza Milajerdi3Amir Hossein Mohammadi,*Amir Hossein Mohammadi1,3*
  • 1Student Research Committee, Kashan University of Medical Sciences, Kashan, Iran
  • 2Cellular, Molecular and Genetics Research Center, Isfahan University of Medical Sciences, Isfahan, Iran
  • 3Research Center for Biochemistry and Nutrition in Metabolic Diseases, Institute for Basic Sciences, Kashan University of Medical Sciences, Kashan, Iran

Infertility is a prevalent worldwide health issue and is defined by the World Health Organization (WHO) as a global health problem. Considering the importance of the psychological dimensions of infertility, various measurement tools have been used to measure the variables involved in infertility, of which the most widely used are the following: the Symptom Checklist 90 (SCL90), the Brief Symptom Inventory (BSI), the State-Trait Anxiety Inventory Form (STAI), and the Depression Anxiety Stress Scale (DASS). Therefore, given the problems of infertile people in terms of psychological dimensions, the aim of this meta-analysis was to assess the psychological assessment score in infertility. Following the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA) protocol, we applied an online database with no time restriction. Data were gathered using a random-effect model to estimate the standard mean difference (SMD) for the evaluation of the strength of association analyses. Our data demonstrated a significant higher SCL90 score (CISCL90: 0.96, 0.34–1.57, heterogeneity: 94%, pheterogeneity < 0.001), and a non-significant higher DASS score (CIAnxiety: 0.82, -0.14 to 1.79; CIDepression: 0.8, -0.28 to 1.87; and CIStress: 0.82, -0.24 to 1.88). It is essential to seek for strategies to help infertile patients overcome their infertility-related psychological problems.

Introduction

Infertility is a widespread, serious health problem that is defined as a global public health problem by the World Health Organization (WHO) (Agarwal et al., 2015; Cong et al., 2016). Infertility is considered as the failed achievement of a viable pregnancy following 1 year of unprotected intercourse, and it is estimated that more than 186 million people suffer from it worldwide (Inhorn and Patrizio, 2015). This period for women over 35 years of age, however, has been considered 6 months (Practice Committee of the American Society for Reproductive Medicine, 2013). The overall estimated burden of subfertility/infertility is announced to be high. Based on the WHO reports, infertility affects over 10% of women (Boivin et al., 2011; Kalkhoran et al., 2011; Direkvand Moghaddam et al., 2016; Sarkar and Gupta, 2016) and 7% of men (Krausz and Riera-Escamilla, 2018). Indeed, the prevalence of secondary infertility is reported to be about 4.9% (Akhondi et al., 2019).

The reasons for infertility might be categorized into four major groups: (1) male factors, (2) female factors, (3) both male and female factors, and (4) unknown etiology (Speroff and Fritz, 2005; Blundell, 2007; Krausz, 2011). Currently, three major therapeutic strategies, such as surgical therapy (especially endoscopic techniques), pharmacological therapy, and assisted reproductive technology (ART), are available to treat male infertility. ART encompasses all interventional measures, including in vitro handling of both human sperm and oocytes and of embryos for reproduction issues. ART includes in vitro fertilization (IVF) and embryo transfer, gamete and embryo cryopreservation, embryo biopsy, intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI), and preimplantation genetic testing (Dyer et al., 2016).

Infertility affects different life aspects, such as social, mental, and physical ones (Tanha et al., 2014). It also can lead to the development of stigma, shame, depression, anxiety, guilt (Figure 1), and low self-esteem (2019). It is one of the personal and social issues affecting the whole couple’s life and family function, leading to the development of psychological stress and or psychiatric disorders (Boivin, 2003). Infertility can also be considered as one of the most stressful life events. Infertility is believed to be associated with health issues, feeling of grievance, stressful experiences, depression, lack of self-confidence, disappointment, threat, sin, and marital problems (Noorbala et al., 2008). Infertility can generate stress in the family (Dyer et al., 2005; Ozkan and Baysal, 2006; Sadeghian et al., 2006; Peyvandi et al., 2011; Xu et al., 2017). It is speculated that psychological factors rather than biological ones might be the primary cause of infertility. This can be an important field of interest for psychologists (Podolska, 2011).

FIGURE 1
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Figure 1. Infertility is a real challenge as a couple disorder and sexual dysfunction is an emerging paradigm. A couple-centered approach for the treatment for infertility is mandatory requiring a multidisciplinary team for the comprehensive management of ISS including the whole sexual, rational, and emotional aspects of infertile couples. ART assisted reproductive technology, ED erectile dysfunction, HSDD hypoactive sexual desire disorder, and ISS Inferto-Sex Syndrome. This figure is adapted from Luca et al. (2021).

Due to the importance of the psychological dimension of infertility, various psychological treatments for infertility have been used so far (Domar et al., 1992; McQueeney et al., 1997; Hosaka et al., 2002; McNaughton-Cassill et al., 2002; Cousineau et al., 2008; Faramarzi et al., 2008; Lancastle and Boivin, 2008; Panagopoulou et al., 2009; Hämmerli et al., 2010; Hughes and da Silva, 2011; Vizheh et al., 2013; Frederiksen et al., 2015). Due to the importance of the psychological dimensions of infertility, various measurement tools have been used to assess the variables involved in infertility. The most widely used factors are the following: the Symptom Checklist 90 (SCL90) (Derogatis et al., 1977), the Brief Symptom Inventory (BSI) (Derogatis and Spencer, 1993), the Depression Anxiety Stress Scale (DASS) (Parkitny and McAuley, 2010a), and the State-Trait Anxiety Inventory Form (STAI) (Spielberger, 1983).

Given the importance of psychological issues and problems in the quality of life and the quality of physical therapy for infertile people, paying attention to the psychological dimensions of this problem is strongly required. On the other hand, due to the wide spectrum of mental problems, and in other words, the subjectivity of psychological problems, it is necessary to be able to measure the severity of psychological problems with small tools and break them down into smaller components so that we can study them in the form of scientific problems. One of the important tools to achieve this goal is the use of self-reported psychometric tools, which, despite the problems that this type of measurement has, can partially explain the total dimensions of the problem. Despite the number of studies investigating the association between psychological assessment scores and infertility, there are still some contradictory results. Thus, we aimed to evaluate the association between the psychological assessment score and infertility patients through a meta-analysis approach.

Materials and methods

Search strategy

This study has been done according to the PRISMA protocol (Moher et al., 2009). A systematic search was performed by two independent researchers (SAT and AHM) from the online database to find relevant publications until September 2021. The keywords used in our search strategy were ((”Infertility”) AND (”Psychological assessment” OR “Symptom Checklist-90” OR “SCL90” OR “Brief Symptom Inventory” OR “BSI” OR “Depression Anxiety Stress Scale” OR “DASS” OR “State-Trait Anxiety Inventory Form” OR “STAI”)). No restrictions were considered for the time and language of publications.

Inclusion and exclusion criteria

Inclusion criteria include cases defined according to infertility diagnosis; all studies evaluating the SCL90, BSI, DASS, and STAI scores of patients with infertility; studies that reported the SCL90, BSI, DASS, and STAI scores at baseline through clinical trials on infertile patients vs. healthy controls; and those that reported mean ± standard deviation (SD). In the case of the same dataset with more than one publication, only articles with more complete findings were included in our study. On the other hand, comments, short letters, clinical trials without a healthy control group, communications, reviews, meta-analyses, case reports, and animal studies were excluded from the meta-analysis.

Data extraction

Two independent researchers performed data extraction and study selection. The reported mean ± SD for the SCL90, BSI, DASS, and STAI scores were extracted from patients compared with the control group. In addition, we extracted the information from each study (Tables 15).

TABLE 1
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Table 1. SCL90 assessment studies in infertility.

TABLE 2
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Table 2. BSI assessment studies in infertility.

TABLE 3
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Table 3. DASS assessment studies in infertility.

TABLE 4
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Table 4. STAI-S assessment studies in infertility.

TABLE 5
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Table 5. General characteristics of included studies in the meta-analysis.

Quality assessment

A form of the Newcastle Ottawa scale (NOS) was designed for observational studies and was used to assess the quality of selected studies. The NOS considers a maximum of ten points for each study. The studies that had an NOS score of 5 or more were considered high quality publications (Peterson et al., 2011). We used the JADAD checklist for evaluation of the quality of interventional studies (Jadad et al., 1996). Two independent reviewers filled out the scores for each eligible study.

Statistical analysis

For both the infertility and control groups, the SCL90, BSI, DASS, and STAI scores were reported using mean ± SD and 95% confidence interval (CI). The overall mean ± SD data were calculated using a random-effect model and/or a fixed-effect model. The SMD and CI were considered the overall if there was true heterogeneity between included studies, we employed a random-effect model; otherwise, a fixed-effect model was used. To assess between-study heterogeneity, Cochran’s Q-test and I2 were used. A random-effect model was used if pheterogeneity was less than 0.1 (Higgins et al., 2011). Statistical analyses were carried out using review manager software (STATA version 14, StataCorp).

Result

We identified 32 studies in our systematic review. The last remaining nine articles were included in the meta-analysis, and the characteristics of these studies are illustrated in Figure 2. The results of the overall and stratified analyses are summarized in Figure 3. Regarding SCL90 and DASS, there was a statistically significant association between higher SCL90 scores and infertility. However, there was no significant difference between the case and control groups regarding the higher score of DASS. Indeed, true heterogeneities were observed across studies for the two abovementioned parameters.

FIGURE 2
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Figure 2. PRISMA flow diagram. SCL90 Symptom Checklist 90, BSI Brief Symptom Inventory, STAI State-Trait Anxiety Inventory Form, and DASS Depression Anxiety Stress Scale.

FIGURE 3
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Figure 3. Forest plot mean difference and 95% confidence intervals (CI) of the meta-analysis on psychological assessment score and association with infertility: Depression Anxiety Stress Scale (DASS) (A–C) (Anxiety, Depression, and Stress respectively); Symptom Checklist 90 (SCL90) (D). Horizontal lines represent 95% CI.

Discussion

In our meta-analysis, we found a statistically significant higher score of SCL90 but there was not a statistically significant association between a higher score of DASS and infertility. Only one study was performed regarding the relationship between BSI and STAI in association with infertility. Therefore, further study is needed to investigate the association between infertility and BSI and STAI. In line with our findings, Petersen et al. in gynecologic cancer (Petersen et al., 2005), Shi et al. in polycystic ovarian syndrome (PCOS) (Shi et al., 2011), and Pan et al. (2013) in breast cancer reported higher SCL90 scores in subjects compared with the control group. Similar investigations were also performed. Barber and Steadman demonstrated a non-significantly different DASS score in pregnant vs. non-pregnant women (Barber and Steadman, 2018). In contrast, Rothemund et al. observed no significant difference regarding the SCL90 score in women at high risk for breast cancer (Rothemund et al., 2001). Furthermore, Ali et al., Jamshidian-QalehShahi et al., and Ho et al. reported higher DASS scores in subjects with infertility (Ali et al., 2011; Jamshidian-QalehShahi et al., 2017; Ho et al., 2020).

In comparison with the DASS, the SCL90 is used to measure more general psychological symptoms (Eivors et al., 2008). Additionally, it examines more general and complete psychological distress among people compared with the DASS score (Modabernia et al., 2010). Indeed, the physicalization and obsessive-compulsive scales, which are higher in infertile cases, are included in the SCL90 while they are not measured by the DASS score (Conrad et al., 2003; Burns, 2007). One of the scales which is examined more completely in the SCL90 test than the DASS score and is also observed in infertile people is interpersonal sensitivity, i.e., infertile people usually have a higher score on this scale due to the psychological nature of infertility (Noorbala et al., 2009). Furthermore, one of the scales that exists meaningfully in infertile people and is measured by the SCL90 test is paranoid ideations due to the psychological burden of bereavement in infertility (Sadeghian et al., 2006). In general, the SCL90 test examines the psychological symptoms caused by infertility in a wider way than the DASS test, and it is a more reliable scale for measuring the overall symptoms. However, the DASS test, which is applied for the measurement of depression, stress, and anxiety, is more specialized than the SCL90 since it examines these three scales, and if the goal is only to examine these three scales, the DASS test will be more specialized (Parkitny and McAuley, 2010b).

The components of anxiety and depression exist in infertile patients. Since the nature of infertility is felt by infertile people, such as experiencing grief and experiencing a feeling of deficiency in the body, the intensity of these components will increase psychologically in these people. Generally, some aspects of depression are caused by the feeling of impaired efficiency (Lapane et al., 1995). In addition, biological data indicate decreased serotonin and norepinephrine levels in these people following the emergence of depression problems (Shi et al., 2011). Studies demonstrate the negative impacts of these two factors on fertility treatment (Szkodziak et al., 2020).

A study on a rat sample of depression and menopause illustrated significantly higher levels of follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH), Luteinizing hormone (LH), cortisone, and Adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH) in groups exposed to mild stress factors vs. those without such an exposure. On the other hand, dopamine levels were lower in the stress groups (Gu et al., 2018).

Men and women equally suffer from obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) that most often develops in early life. Infertile cases with a history of OCD might be focused on contamination obsessions and cleaning rituals associated with infertility treatments due to their assumption regarding sterile techniques associated with injections as a part of various treatments for infertility (Williams and Koran, 1997) that can enhance their exclusive compulsive ritualistic behaviors and or trigger their newly emerged rituals. Treatment compliance can be impaired due to the existing needle and blood injury phobias and their associated unmanageable anxiety state. Caregivers might be required to adapt therapeutic protocols or request psychological or psychiatric care before going on treatment (Williams and Zappert, 2006). Cognitive behavioral therapies and behavioral strategies should also be encouraged (Williams and Zappert, 2006). A close association was observed between hypothalamus-pituitary disorders and psychological scores in PCOS. In the current study, we observed a significant positive correlation between serum concentration of 3-methoxy-4-hydroxyphenylglycol and phobic subscale scores of SCL90 in total samples. Hostility subscale scores demonstrated a significant negative correlation with serum concentration of Dihydroxyphenylacetic acid of PCOS cases, however, no significant correlation was observed between other monoamine neurotransmitters and their metabolites and other subscales of the SCL90 score (Shi et al., 2011).

Several lines of research support the positive impacts of harp therapy, group psychotherapy, cognitive behavioral therapy, and mind-body intervention (Eastern body-mind-spirit, Integrative body-mind-spirit, and mind-body intervention) on the pregnancy rate, anxiety level, or marital function of infertile couples (Ying et al., 2016). A complex intervention should be developed based on sound evidence to target both men and women in infertile couples who have undergone IVF treatment, especially during the stressful interval waiting for the results of pregnancy tests following failed cycles.

This meta-analysis has several limitations. First, the main limitation is the insufficient number of eligible performed studies containing the subgroup analysis. Second, psychological symptoms are non-specific, and they can be affected by various factors. Although some of these factors, such as age and gender, were considered in included studies, not all of them have been considered in the total associated factors. For a better understanding of the association between psychological status and infertility, it is advisable to consider all of the abovementioned factors. Additionally, the included studies derived from different sample sources and diverse applied methodologies, will naturally increase the data heterogeneity. Last, the low number of eligible articles, the moderate quality (mean of 5 in the NOS), and the high heterogeneity of effect sizes among the included studies in each independent meta-analysis are factors that affect reliability and are better avoided. Some other confounding factors, such as disease phase (acute or remission phase), the age of the disease onset, and the presence of concomitant psychopharmacological treatments of patients, were not considered in the meta-analysis.

In conclusion, we found evidence supporting an increased significant SCL90 score and a non-significant higher DASS score in infertility patients. The prevalence of psychological problems in infertile cases seems to be increasing in many countries. These findings suggest that psychological treatment might have some beneficial impacts on infertility cases. Further research is needed to confirm this association.

Author contributions

SAT, AHM, and AM designed the study. SAT, AHM, and AM collected data. SAT, AHM, AM, and MB wrote the manuscript. All authors read and approved the final manuscript.

Conflict of interest

The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest.

Publisher’s note

All claims expressed in this article are solely those of the authors and do not necessarily represent those of their affiliated organizations, or those of the publisher, the editors and the reviewers. Any product that may be evaluated in this article, or claim that may be made by its manufacturer, is not guaranteed or endorsed by the publisher.

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Keywords: infertility, psychological assessment, SCL90, BSI, DASS, STAI

Citation: Tavousi SA, Behjati M, Milajerdi A and Mohammadi AH (2022) Psychological assessment in infertility: A systematic review and meta-analysis. Front. Psychol. 13:961722. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2022.961722

Received: 05 June 2022; Accepted: 03 October 2022;
Published: 28 October 2022.

Edited by:

Alessandro Giuliani, National Institute of Health (ISS), Italy

Reviewed by:

Abubakr Abdelraouf Alfadl, Qassim University, Saudi Arabia
Mohammad Karimian, University of Mazandaran, Iran

Copyright © 2022 Tavousi, Behjati, Milajerdi and Mohammadi. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.

*Correspondence: Amir Hossein Mohammadi, OTIxODExMzUzMDIzc0BnbWFpbC5jb20=

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