The following article refers to this text: 2007;33(1):1-80
The aim of this study was to determine whether there was a relation between male exposure to pesticides and the amount of time needed to conceive (time to pregnancy) for farmers and agricultural workers in France and Denmark. The authors used retrospective studies to compare the time to pregnancy of couples in which the man was exposed to pesticides during the year before the birth of their youngest child with that of couples in which the man was not exposed. In 1995 and 1996, the authors studied 362 French rural workers (142 exposed to pesticides and 220 not exposed), 449 Danish farmers (326 conventional farmers exposed to pesticides and 123 nonexposed organic farmers), and 121 Danish greenhouse workers exposed to pesticides. The fecundability ratio for exposure to pesticides (Cox model, before and after adjustment for confounding factors) did not differ from 1 in any of the three populations. In France, the adjusted fecundability ratio was 1.17 (95% confidence interval (CI) 0.89-1.55) for exposed and nonexposed agricultural workers. In Denmark, it was 1.09 (95% CI 0.82-1.43) for exposed and nonexposed farmers and 0.83 (95% CI 0.69-1.18) for greenhouse workers and nonexposed farmers. Thus, this study found no relation between fertility (time to pregnancy) and male exposure to pesticides.
Objectives Several reports indicate a secular decline of human sperm counts. It is still not known if these findings are artifacts related to shortcomings in the data and applied methodologies. Even less is known about possible mechanisms, but it has been proposed that potential changes may be related to disruption of the hormonal regulation of testicular development in prenatal life. The objective of this study was to examine whether sperm count was related to year of birth. Methods An analysis was made of the sperm count of 1196 men participating in 10 cross-sectional occupational sperm studies in 3 regions of Denmark from 1986 through 1995. Results The median sperm concentration was 63 million per milliliter for men born in 1937-1949 and 52 million per milliliter for men born in 1970 or later, and the median total sperm was 206 million and 117 million, respectively. The inverse relationship between sperm concentration and year of birth was statistically significant even after adjustment for duration of sexual abstinence, season of the year, and study population. However, bias because of differential participation related to age and fertility or lack of comparability across the populations cannot be ruled out. C O~C~U S~O~~S The apparent decline of sperm count with increasing year of birth is compatible with the hypothesis of a common risk factor for male reproductive health operating in prenatal life or early childhood, but the evidence is circumstantial. Age-related selection bias is an alternative and perhaps not a less likely explanation.
Participation rates in sperm studies are typically 25-50%, and therefore it is a matter of concern whether the men who provide semen samples truly reflect the parent population. The authors analyzed data from three Danish occupational sperm studies and evaluated the relation between age and occurrence of subfertility to participation and provision of semen samples. Age and subfertility were found to be rather strong determinants of participation. Willingness to provide semen samples was greater among men aged <40 years (odds ratio (OR) = 1.8, 95% confidence interval (CI) 1.3-2.6) and among men who had experienced an infertile period (OR = 1.7, 95% CI 1.3-2.1). Furthermore, the effect of infertility was modified by occupational exposure status, thus resulting in a tendency to differential selection and possibly biased risk estimates. In a cross-sectional study, the authors recommend that priority be given to a high participation rate and that data on the basic variables be collected from the entire study population, so that it is possible to make a nonresponder analysis and evaluate bias. Such an analysis can be carried out by means of questions enquiring about infertility, genital disorders, and earlier seminal examinations. Although the longitudinal study design is without many of the limitations of the cross-sectional study, a longitudinal study is usually not feasible.
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