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Paternal age

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Paternal age has trended upwards in the United States, England, and elsewhere in recent years.408, 409

The current consensus view is that a male ≥40 years of age at the time of conception is defined as being of advanced age.410 Advanced paternal age (≥40) in the United States for childbearing in the 35‐ to 49‐year‐old category has risen from 42.8/1000 to 69.1/1000 from 1980–2015.411 This probably reflects increased divorce/remarriage rates and the increased use of assisted reproductive technologies.409 Advanced paternal age is associated with increased infertility and miscarriage rates,409, 412415 as well as an increased risk of 0.3–0.5 percent of de novo autosomal dominant mutations that result in severe phenotypes.416421 Professional societies and others whose guidelines suggest that sperm donors be less than 50 years of age,422, 423 might now reconsider given both new and established data.

Well‐established data exist for a number of autosomal dominant disorders in the offspring of older fathers408 (Table 1.4), with achondroplasia having a relative risk of 12. The causes are de novo mutations estimated to accumulate to 420 over a 20‐year period.408 An Israeli psychiatric disease registry study of 87,907 births, showed a 2.96‐fold relative risk of schizophrenia among the offspring of fathers over 50 years of age compared with those aged 20–24 years.424 A Swedish National Birth Registry study of the entire population of births (2,615,081) between 1973 and 2010 examined the link between autism and paternal age.425 The authors observed a statistically significant 3.45‐fold greater likelihood of autism for fathers age at conception of >45 years compared to fathers in the 20–24 age group. They also reported a 13.1‐fold greater likelihood of developing attention deficit hyperactivity disorder and a 2.07‐fold risk of psychosis. In a California study of 5,121 spontaneous abortions between 6 and 20 weeks of pregnancy, fathers over 50 years of age had double the likelihood of associated pregnancy loss.415 A prospective Danish study of 23,821 pregnancies showed that fathers >50 years of age had associated risks of fetal death almost twice that of younger fathers.426

Table 1.4 Single‐gene dominant disorders in offspring that are associated with advanced paternal age and relevant to prenatal diagnosis.

Clinical condition Gene Population risk Relative risk Adjusted risk
Achondroplasia FGFR3 1/15,000 12 1/1,250
Apert syndrome FGFR2 1/50,000 9.5 1/5,263
Crouzon syndrome FGFR2 1/50,000 8 1/6,250
Pfeiffer syndrome FGFR2 1/100,000 6 1/16,666
Wilms tumor WT1 1/10,000 2.1 1/4,761
Bilateral retinoblastoma RB1 1/15,000 5 1/3,000
Neurofibromatosis 1 NF1 1/3,000 2.9 1/1,034
Osteogenesis imperfecta COL1A1/2 1/10,000 2.5 1/4,000
Polycystic kidney disease PKD1/2 1/1,000 1.2 1/833
Thanatophoric dysplasia FGFR3 1/20,000 3.18 1/6,290

Source: Yatsenko et al.408 Reproduced with permission of Springer Nature.

A Swiss population study found that the proportion of younger fathers was uniformly different between those with and without Down syndrome offspring. Young fathers had an almost twofold increased odds for siring a child with trisomy 21.427 The authors stated the need for confirmation of their findings.

Paternal age should garner more attention during genetic counseling,428 especially with the availability of molecular analysis of multiple genes susceptible to de novo mutations in both noninvasive prenatal testing (see Chapter 8) and prenatal diagnosis (see Chapter 14).

Genetic Disorders and the Fetus

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