[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]

(fwd)--new info on sperm count metastudy



saw this posed to helath-e list, pretty sure it hasn't made it to dioxin-l
yet.   it's IMPORTANT to note this section of NIH's press release:

'However, these studies did not take into account such factors as the
              age of the subjects, the length of abstinence prior to sample
              collection, and method of sample collection, each of which can
              influence the observed trend. Swan said, "Most of the critics have
              suggested ways in which the data analysis might be skewed, but no
              one has ever looked at the data from these earlier studies to see
              whether these hypothetical biases are actually present."

              Using a statistical model that corrects for individual
differences in
              these key variables as well as geographic area, Swan and her
              colleagues reanalyzed the data from 56 of the studies cited in the
              1992 paper. The investigators excluded three non-English
language..'
---


  NATIONAL INSTITUTES OF HEALTH

National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences


  EMBARGOED FOR RELEASE
  Monday, November 24, 1997
  7:00 AM Eastern Time


John Peterson

(
919) 541-7860


     Reanalysis of International Data Finds Sharp Decline in Sperm
                                                                      Density

              After an extensive review of data from 61 published studies, three
              California researchers have concluded that a decline in average
              sperm density reported in the U.S. and other Western countries may
              be even greater than previously estimated.

              Their analysis of data collected from 1938 to 1990 indicates that
              sperm densities in the United States have exhibited an average
              annual decrease of 1.5 million sperm per milliliter of collected
              sample, or about 1.5 percent per year, while those in European
              countries have declined at about twice that rate (3.1 percent per
              year).

              The study was conducted by epidemiologists Shanna Swan, Eric Elkin
              and Laura Fenster of the California Department of Health
Services. It
              appears in the November issue of Environmental Health
Perspectives,
              the monthly scientific journal published by the National
Institute of
              Environmental Health Sciences.

              Since the early 1930's, there has been considerable interest in
              declining semen quality as a key predictor of male reproductive
              dysfunction. The vast majority of studies designed to answer this
              question have focused on sperm density - the number of sperm
              contained in one milliliter of sample. (One milliliter is
              approximately 1/30th of an ounce.)

              Despite enormous differences in data collection methods, study
              population and time period, most studies have come to the same
              conclusion - that sperm density has declined. In fact, a 1992
review
              of 61 such studies (Evidence for decreasing quality of semen
during
              past 50 years, E. Carlsen, A. Giwercman, and N. Skakkebaek,
British
              Medical Journal, vol. 305, page 609) revealed a steady
decline, from
              113 million sperm per milliliter in 1938 to 66 million in 1990, or
              about 1 million sperm per milliliter per year.

              However, these studies did not take into account such factors
as the
              age of the subjects, the length of abstinence prior to sample
              collection, and method of sample collection, each of which can
              influence the observed trend. Swan said, "Most of the critics have
              suggested ways in which the data analysis might be skewed, but no
              one has ever looked at the data from these earlier studies to see
              whether these hypothetical biases are actually present."

              Using a statistical model that corrects for individual
differences in
              these key variables as well as geographic area, Swan and her
              colleagues reanalyzed the data from 56 of the studies cited in the
              1992 paper. The investigators excluded three non-English language
              studies and two others that included men who had conceived only
              after an infertility workup.

              While the results of their analyses also showed a significant
decline
              in sperm density, it was the rate of the decline, particularly in
              Western countries, that was most surprising. "We observed a
              decrease of about 1.5 million sperm per milliliter per year in the
              United States, and a corresponding decrease of about 3 million
              sperm per year in Europe," reports Swan.

              For non-Western countries, a group that included Brazil, India,
              Israel, Hong Kong, Kuwait, Nigeria and Thailand, the trend was
              slightly positive. However, because these data were taken
from only
              13 studies, all of which were published after 1978, this trend was
              not statistically significant.

              Since no mathematical model can ever fit the data perfectly, there
              is always a certain discrepancy between what the model predicts
              and what actually happens - this is often referred to as
variability.
              "A perfect model would explain 100 percent of this
variability," says
              Swan. "Our model accounts for 80 percent - that is the best fit of
              any model that has been proposed."

              Although the authors do not address the specific causes of this
              phenomenon, some recent studies have focused on the relationship
              between environmental exposures and declining sperm quality.
In one
              such study, researchers reported a significant correlation between
              lowered sperm densities and increased levels of organochlorine
              compounds in the subjects' seminal fluid. In another,
investigators
              found that a general decline in sperm concentration during
the years
              1949 to 1981 was statistically linked to an overall increase in
              several environmental exposures.

              While there is no evidence that this apparent decline in sperm
              density has led to reduced fertility, the authors say sperm count
              may be a surrogate indicator of effects on the male reproductive
              system. They say, for example, that in countries such as Denmark,
              England and the United States, where sperm counts have fallen, the
              incidence of testicular cancer has increased dramatically over the
              last 25 years, while in Finland, where sperm counts are still
              relatively high, testicular cancer rates have remained low.

              Researcher Shanna H. Swan, Ph.D., can be reached at (510)
450-3818.