Paternal Exposure to Non-essential Heavy Metal Affects Embryo Cleavage and Implantation in Intracytoplasmic Sperm Injection (ICSI) Cycles: Evidence for a Paradoxical Effect

Loading...
Thumbnail Image

Date

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media Deutschland GmbH

Abstract

Although the adverse effects of non-essential heavy metals on semen quality have been demonstrated in experimental animal models and occupational human exposure studies, little is known about the reproductive efficiency of exposed sperm during the process of intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI). Our study aims to evaluate the effect of paternal exposure to non-essential heavy metals on embryo efficiency outcomes (embryo cleavage, fragmentation, implantation, and live birth) in ICSI cycle. Ninety-five heterosexual couples who underwent 95 ICSI cycles and 78 fresh embryo transfers between January 2003 and December 2009 were evaluated. Men whose female partner was undergoing ICSI were asked to provide semen and blood samples. Heavy metal levels (Pb, Cd, As, Hg, Ba, and U) were analyzed using an ion-coupled plasma-mass spectrometry (ICP-MS; Agilent 7500 ce, Agilent Technologies, Germany) equipped with a cell dynamic range (CDR). Paternal exposure to trace heavy metals was found to influence intermediate reproductive endpoints in ICSI cycles. After adjusting for paternal and maternal confounders, paternal blood concentrations of Cd [−0.30(−0.11,−0.02)], As [−0.26(−0.16,−0.11)], and U [−0.22(−0.24,−0.02)] were inversely associated with embryo cell cleavage on day 3. Counterintuitively, paternal blood and semen Pb levels [0.26(0.01,0.22); 0.25(0.03,0.14)] as well as semen U levels [0.27(0.01,0.19)] were positively associated with the proportion of implanted embryos. There were no significant associations observed for clinical pregnancy and live birth rates with any paternal heavy metal concentrations in semen and blood. These findings highlight the importance of paternal health for embryo efficiency outcomes in ICSI treatment cycles and the need for more male partner inclusive counseling in fertility practice. They also underline a paradoxical positive association between some heavy metal pollutants at low exposure levels and reproductive outcomes. © 2021, Society for Reproductive Investigation.

Description

Keywords

Embryo cleavage, Heavy metals, Implantation, Intracytoplasmic sperm injection, Live birth, Adolescent, Adult, Body burden, Cleavage stage, ovum, Embryo implantation, Embryonic development, Female, Fertility, Humans, Infertility, Male, Metals, heavy, Paternal exposure, Pregnancy, Prospective studies, Sperm injections, intracytoplasmic, Time factors, Treatment outcome, Young adult, Arsenic, Barium, Cadmium, Chorionic gonadotropin, Estradiol, Follitropin, Gonadorelin agonist, Heavy metal, Human menopausal gonadotropin, Lead, Mercury, Non essential heavy metal, Unclassified drug, Uranium, Aged, Article, Blastomere, Blood sampling, Clinical outcome, Cohort analysis, Controlled study, Dna fragmentation, Embryo, Embryo cell, Embryo transfer, Embryotoxicity, Estradiol blood level, Follitropin blood level, Germinal vesicle, Heavy metal blood level, Heterosexuality, Human, Human tissue, Inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry, Lifestyle, Major clinical study, Male infertility, Metaphase, Nidation, Oocyte cleavage, Oocyte maturation, Ovarian reserve, Ovary follicle maturation, Prospective study, Reproductive toxicity, Seminal plasma, Sperm, Sperm preparation, Sperm quality, Spontaneous abortion, Very elderly, Adverse event, Blood, Drug effect, Embryo development, Pathophysiology, Time factor

Citation

Endorsement

Review

Supplemented By

Referenced By