Good Fertility Rates in Men with Inflammatory Joint Disease Compared to Healthy Peers

Written By :  Anshika Mishra
Medically Reviewed By :  Dr. Kamal Kant Kohli
Published On 2024-01-24 03:45 GMT   |   Update On 2024-01-24 03:45 GMT

Men with inflammatory joint disease, such as rheumatoid arthritis, are less likely to be childless and have more children than their healthy peers, according to the research published online in the medical journal Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases.Autoimmune diseases are on the rise, and impaired fertility has been reported in Norwegian women with inflammatory joint diseases. But only a...

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Men with inflammatory joint disease, such as rheumatoid arthritis, are less likely to be childless and have more children than their healthy peers, according to the research published online in the medical journal Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases.

Autoimmune diseases are on the rise, and impaired fertility has been reported in Norwegian women with inflammatory joint diseases. But only a few studies looking at the potential impact on men’s fertility have been carried out.

To explore these issues further, using childlessness and number of children as proxies for fertility, the researchers drew on a national group of 10,865 Norwegian men with either rheumatoid arthritis (37%), psoriatic arthritis (33%), or spondyloarthritis (30%). Each of them was matched with 5 healthy men (54,325) from the general population.

Between 1967 and August 2021, 111, 246 children were born to the total number of 65,190 men. Average age of first time fatherhood was 27 among the men with inflammatory joint disease and 28 in the comparison group. The average age at diagnosis was 44.

Births and childlessness were divided into 3 time periods, reflecting major changes in drug treatment for inflammatory joint diseases:1967-85 (before the advent of methotrexate; 575); 1986–99 (methotrexate;1360); and 2000–21 (use of biologics; 8930).

The average number of children each patient fathered was 1.8 compared with 1.7 in the comparison group, and around 1 in 5 (21%) of the patients was childless compared with more than 1 in 4 (27%) in the comparison group.

The difference in childlessness and number of children between the two groups was seen in all age brackets, except for those aged 19 and younger. Similarly, the proportion of childless men remained significantly lower among the patients than in the comparison group for those diagnosed between the ages of 20 and 79.

These differences were consistent over time, but the largest difference in number of children was numerically highest for those diagnosed after 2000: average of 1.8 vs 1.6. These patients also had the lowest risk of childlessness: 22% vs 28%.

They conclude: “Male patients with [inflammatory joint disease] may be reassured that no impairment of fertility is expected. However, sub-studies according to specific diagnoses should be performed to offer more targeted patient information. Our finding of less childlessness and a higher number of children per man in patients with [inflammatory joint disease] is novel and generates new hypotheses regarding associations between fertility, inflammatory rheumatic diseases and immune-modulating drugs. This ought to be investigated further.”

Reference: Men with inflammatory joint disease are less likely to be childless than healthy peers; Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases

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Article Source : Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases

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