Chemotherapy and Sperm
A team of researchers from the Lawrence Livermore Laboratory have presented evidence that
chemotherapy treatment may adversely alter sperm on a temporary basis.
Abnormalities in sperm make it unwise for men to father children while undergoing
chemotherapy treatment because of the increased risk of having a defective offspring.
Missing or extra chromosomes commonly kill a fetus in the womb or cause birth defects.
This work was published in the May issue of the scientific journal Nature Genetics
and includes the results of an eight-year study of men with Hodgkins disease, a cancer of
white blood cells. This disease tends to strike people between the ages of 20 and 40 which
is the parental age when most children are conceived.
The research focused on the sex chromosomes, known as X and Y, but also included
chromosome 8 because it responds to fluorescent dye better than other chromosomes.
Among the patients studied during this research project, the number of sperm with extra or
missing X, Y or number 8 chromosomes increased five-fold during chemotherapy treatment,
according to the researchers.
It was also noted by the research team that the effect was temporary. About 100 days after
treatment ended, the abnormal sperm counts had returned to pre-treatment levels.
Disorders in chromosomes are very common. In fact, about 7 in every 1,000 births will be
affected by a chromosomal disorder. A chromosome abnormality is something that can be seen
under a microscope.
In recent years the understanding of chromosomes and what can go wrong with them has
greatly improved and expanded. The most frequently occuring chromosome abnormality and the
leading genetic cause of mental retardation is Down Syndrome. Down Syndrome usually occurs
when there is an extra chromosome 21.
Back to Issue - June 1997
Back to The Prevention News