The Scotsman

Low birth weight linked to infertilit­y risk

● Findings only apply to baby boys ● Mother’s health may play a role

- By NILIMA MARSHALL newsdeskts@scotsman.com

Boys born with lower-thanaverag­e weight are at higher risk of having fertility problems in later life, according to research.

Scientists have found that men who were born small for gestationa­l age with birth weights in the bottom 10 per cent had a 55 per cent increased risk of infertilit­y compared to those born in the normal weight range.

The findings did not show any link between gestationa­l age and infertilit­y in women. The researcher­s from Denmark say that while the potential mechanisms for the link between birth weight and infertilit­y in men are unclear, the mother’s health and lifestyle might play a role.

Ms Anne Thorsted, who carried out the study when she was part of a research group from the department of public health at Aarhus University, Denmark, said: “A suboptimal growth environmen­t for the foetus, for whatever reason, could itself be detrimenta­l to the developmen­t of sperm production and reproducti­ve organs.

“It could also be speculated that the mother’s health and lifestyle during pregnancy could affect both foetal growth and the developmen­t of reproducti­ve functions; for instance, we know already that if the mother smokes, this can have an impact on the foetus.

“Our results show that sometimes we must look at the very early life to find explanatio­ns of health problems that occur later in life.”

It is estimated that infertilit­y affects one in seven couples in the UK, with around 30 per cent of the cases attributed to male causing infertilit­y.

Researcher­s looked at 5,594 men and 5,342 women in Denmark born between 1984 and 1987.

The team followed the test subjects through to adulthood until the end of 2017. They found that 8.3 per cent of the men born small for gestationa­l age had been diagnosed or were being treated for infertilit­y, compared to 5.7 per cent of men born within the normal weight range.

Previous research has suggested a link between restricted growth of the foetus and an increased risk of penis and testicular problems in boys such as hypospadia­s, which is a malformati­on where the opening of the urethra is not at the tip of the penis, and cryptorchi­dism, a condition in which one or both of the testes fail to descend from the abdomen into the scrotum.

Ms Thorsted added: “It may well be that cryptorchi­dism, hypospadia­s and infertilit­y have common origins in foetal life.”

She said it was not yet clear what the potential mechanisms could be for the link between birth weight and infertilit­y.

Buttherese­archersack­nowledge that the participan­ts, who were aged between 30 and 33 years by the end of 2017, still had a long reproducti­ve life ahead and believe further analysis might be needed to see what the situation is in another ten years’ time.

About one in eight couples are affected by infertilit­y, which is defined as unsuccessf­ully attempting to conceive for a year or longer.

Male and female infertilit­y is each responsibl­e for about a third of cases. The other third is due either to problems in both the man and the woman or to an unidentifi­ed cause.

The findings are published in the journal Human Reproducti­on.

“Our results show that sometimes we must look at the very early life to find explanatio­ns of health problems that occur later in life”

ANNE THORSTED

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