Fertility in men with hypospadias: A nationwide register‐based study using dizygotic twinning rates as an indicator of semen quality.

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    • Abstract:
      Background: It is not known if impaired fertility in men with hypospadias is caused by decreased semen quality or other factors. Semen quality in men born with hypospadias may be impaired due to effects of androgens or testicular dysgenesis but has been very little studied. Objectives: To study semen quality in men with hypospadias using dizygotic twinning rates as an epidemiological indicator. We further aimed to study men treated for cryptorchidism, given a hypothesized mutual etiology for decreased semen quality. Materials and methods: We conducted a population‐based study using national Swedish registers. A total of 4,363,165 births between 1964 and 2013 were included. The association between hypospadias and cryptorchidism, and fathering dizygotic multiple births was estimated using logistic regression and presented as odds ratios. The main analyses excluded births conceived using assisted reproductive technology (ART). Results: We identified a total of 5317 births with fathers with hypospadias, including 26 dizygotic births conceived unassisted. No significant association was found between hypospadias and dizygotic twinning (OR 1.10, 0.75–1.61). We estimated a significantly increased odds for dizygotic multiple births in men treated for cryptorchidism (OR 1.35, 1.01–1.81) which was decreased after exclusion of ART, but the estimate was not significant (OR 0.75, 0.48–1.18). Discussion: Using dizygotic twinning rates as an indicator of semen quality, we did not find any difference between fathers with hypospadias and controls. Due to sample size, we could not analyze phenotypes separately and can therefore not exclude impaired semen quality in severe hypospadias. We could not demonstrate any association between dizygotic twinning and cryptorchidism. Men treated for cryptorchidism were more likely than controls to use ART to conceive. Conclusion: Men with hypospadias who conceived without ART were not shown to have impaired semen quality using dizygotic twinning as an epidemiological indicator. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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