Orlando Sentinel

Regular male pot use linked to partners’ miscarriag­es

- By Dennis Thompson

Men who use marijuana at least once a week are twice as likely to see their partner’s pregnancy end in miscarriag­e, compared with those who use no pot, new research suggests.

Miscarriag­es related to frequent male pot use tended to occur within eight weeks of conception, which bolsters suspicions that marijuana use damages sperm in some essential way, said lead researcher Alyssa Harlow, a doctoral student at the Boston University School of Public Health.

Some previous studies have indicated that pot use can lower sperm count and reduce the active movement of sperm, Harlow noted. There’s also a possibilit­y that marijuana could cause DNA damage in sperm.

“We would expect that the sperm was healthy enough to fertilize an egg, but any damage to the sperm might result in early pregnancy loss,” Harlow said.

For the study, Harlow and her colleagues gathered data from more than 1,400 couples in the U.S. and Canada who were trying to conceive.

Men were asked about their pot use — whether they used marijuana less than once a week on average, once or more a week, or never. About 8% of the men said they used pot at least weekly, compared with over 82% who said they never use it.

Nearly 19% of couples who did conceive wound up reporting a miscarriag­e, the Boston University researcher­s said.

The associatio­n between frequent pot use before conception and miscarriag­e persisted even after researcher­s restricted their analysis to couples in which the female partner didn’t use marijuana. Those couples also had a doubled risk of miscarriag­e if the man used pot at least once a week.

The researcher­s controlled for a number of factors that could influence risk of miscarriag­e, including smoking status, alcohol and caffeine intake, weight, amount of sleep, history of sexually transmitte­d infections and mood disorders.

That said, only an associatio­n was seen in this study, and Harlow noted that there may be other factors associated with either marijuana use or miscarriag­e that weren’t taken into account.

“More research is needed,” Harlow said.

Mitch Earleywine, an advisory board member of NORML, the pro-marijuana nonprofit organizati­on, agreed that this study cannot prove a direct cause-and-effect link.

While the researcher­s did a “stellar job” of accounting for other factors that can increase miscarriag­e risk, he said, “We should keep in mind that marijuana use was not assigned at random here.” Earleywine is a professor of psychology with the State University of New York at Albany.

There are cannabinoi­d receptors within both sperm and male testicular tissue, indicating that the chemicals in pot do have some direct effect on male reproducti­ve health, said Dr. Harris Nagler, a fertility expert with the Smith Institute of Urology at Long Island Jewish Medical Center in Great Neck, New York. Based on that, Nagler would recommend that men abstain from pot while they’re trying to conceive.

Dr. Scott Krakower, assistant unit chief of psychiatry at Zucker Hillside Hospital in Glen Oaks, New York, agreed, noting that, “This study suggests a potential link, and men should be aware of the negative implicatio­ns it could have. As there is a variable time it can remain in your bloodstrea­m, both men and women should avoid use altogether when planning for a family.”

The study was recently presented at the annual meeting of the American Society for Reproducti­ve Medicine, in Philadelph­ia. Research presented at medical meetings is considered preliminar­y until published in a peer-reviewed journal.

 ?? GETTY ?? Fertility experts recommend that the man and woman should abstain from pot when they are trying to conceive.
GETTY Fertility experts recommend that the man and woman should abstain from pot when they are trying to conceive.

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