Fertility and Sterility
Volume 79, Supplement 3 , Pages 1520-1527, June 2003

Effect of male age on fertility: evidence for the decline in male fertility with increasing age

Presented at the 17th World Congress on Fertility and Sterility, Melbourne, Australia, November 25–30, 2001.

  • Mohamed A.M Hassan, M.Sc.

      Affiliations

    • The University of Hull, Post Graduate Medical Institute and Hull & York Medical School, Hull, United Kingdom
    • Corresponding Author InformationReprint requests: Mohamed A. M. Hassan, M.Sc., Women and Children’s Hospital, Hull Royal Infirmary; Anlaby Road, Hull HU3 2JZ, United Kingdom (FAX: 0044-1482-382781).
  • ,
  • Stephen R Killick, M.D.

      Affiliations

    • The University of Hull, Post Graduate Medical Institute and Hull & York Medical School, Hull, United Kingdom

Received 24 September 2002; received in revised form 30 December 2002; accepted 30 December 2002.

Abstract 

Objective

To evaluate the effect of men’s age on time to pregnancy (TTP) using age at the onset of pregnancy attempts, adjusting for the confounding effects of women’s age, coital frequency, and life-style characteristics.

Design

Observational study.

Setting

Teaching hospital in Hull, United Kingdom.

Patient(s)

Two thousand one hundred twelve consecutive pregnant women.

Intervention(s)

A questionnaire inquiring about TTP, contraceptive use, pregnancy planning, previous subfertility, previous pregnancies, age, and individual life-style characteristics of both partners.

Main outcome measure(s)

Time to pregnancy, conception rates, and relative risk of subfecundity for men and women’s age groups.

Result(s)

As with women’s age, increasing men’s age was associated with significantly rising TTP and declining conception rates. A fivefold increase in TTP occurred with men’s age >45 years. Relative to men <25 years old, those >45 years were 4.6-fold and 12.5-fold more likely to have had TTP of >1 or >2 years. Restricting the analysis to partners of young women revealed similar effects of increasing men’s age. Women >35 years were 2.2-fold more likely to be subfertile than women <25 years. The results were comparable, whether age at conception or at the onset of pregnancy attempts was analyzed, and they remained unchanged after adjustment for the confounding factors.

Conclusion(s)

Evidence for and quantification of the decline in men’s fertility with increasing age is provided.

Keywords:  Fertility, fecundity, men’s age, women’s age, life-style, time to pregnancy

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PII: S0015-0282(03)00366-2

doi:10.1016/S0015-0282(03)00366-2

Fertility and Sterility
Volume 79, Supplement 3 , Pages 1520-1527, June 2003