Department of Environmental Health, Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, Boston, MA, USA.
Channing Division of Network Medicine, Department of Medicine, Brigham and Women's Hospital and Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, USA.
Hum Reprod. 2023 Apr 3;38(4):529-536. doi: 10.1093/humrep/dead027.
Are occupational factors associated with markers of testicular function among men attending a fertility center?
Men working non-daytime/rotating shifts and those with physically demanding jobs have higher sperm concentration and total sperm count as well as higher estradiol and total testosterone concentrations.
Semen quality has declined during recent decades and has been negatively correlated with higher risks of common chronic diseases and mortality, highlighting its public health importance beyond fertility and reproduction. While most of the previous epidemiology literature on male fertility has focused on environmental exposures, dietary factors, and other related variables, little attention has been paid to occupational factors.
STUDY DESIGN, SIZE, DURATION: This observational study included 377 men who were male partners in couples seeking infertility treatment at a fertility center, who enrolled in the Environment and Reproductive Health (EARTH) study between 2005 and 2019.
PARTICIPANTS/MATERIALS, SETTING, METHODS: Self-reported information on lifting/moving heavy objects, typical shift, and physical level of exertion at work was collected from a take-home questionnaire. Semen samples were analyzed following World Health Organization guidelines. Enzyme immunoassays were used to assess reproductive hormone concentrations. Linear regression models were used to evaluate the association between occupational factors and measures of testicular function, while adjusting for covariates such as age, BMI, education, race, smoking, and abstinence time, and accounting for multiple semen samples (mean = 2, min-max = 1-9) in analyses for semen parameters.
Men had a median (interquartile range) age of 36 (33, 39) years and were predominantly Caucasian (87%). Of the men who completed the survey, 12% reported often lifting or moving heavy objects at work, 6% reported heavy physical exertion at work, and 9% reported evening or rotating shifts. Men who reported often lifting or moving heavy objects at work had 46% higher sperm concentrations (P = 0.01) and 44% higher total counts (P = 0.01) compared with men who reported never lifting or moving heavy objects at work. Similar results were found for men working in rotating shifts compared to those in day shifts, as well as for men involved in heavy levels of physical exertion compared to those with light levels at work. We also found that men involved in heavy/moderate levels of physical exertion at work had higher circulating testosterone concentrations compared to those with lighter exertion (adjusted means of 515 and 427 ng/dl, respectively, P = 0.08), and men who often moved/lifted heavy objects at work had higher estradiol concentrations, compared to those who never did (adjusted means of 36.8 and 27.1 pg/ml, respectively, P = 0.07). Men working evening/rotating shifts had 24% higher testosterone (P = 0.04) and 45% higher estradiol concentrations (P = 0.01), compared to men working day shifts. No associations were observed for ejaculated volume, total motility, morphologically normal sperm, or serum FSH and LH concentrations.
LIMITATIONS, REASONS FOR CAUTION: Due to our study design which recruited men from couples seeking fertility treatment, it may not be possible to generalize our findings to men from the general population. Also, as is the case of all studies based on self-reported questionnaires, measurement error and misclassification of the exposure are potential concerns.
Physically demanding jobs and rotating or evening shift occupations may be associated with higher testicular function in men measured as higher sperm concentrations and counts as well as higher serum testosterone and estradiol levels. Confirmation of these findings in other non-fertility clinic study populations is warranted.
STUDY FUNDING/COMPETING INTEREST(S): NIH grants R01ES022955, R01ES009718, R01ES033651, and R01ES000002 from the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS) and Legacy, Inc. R.A.G. works part time for Legacy, Inc., which provided funds to perform this analysis. There are no other conflicts of interest.
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职业因素是否与生育中心就诊男性的睾丸功能标志物有关?
上夜班/倒班和从事体力要求高工作的男性,其精子浓度和总精子数较高,以及雌二醇和总睾酮浓度较高。
近几十年来,精液质量下降,与常见慢性疾病和死亡率的风险增加呈负相关,这凸显了其在生育和生殖以外的公共卫生重要性。尽管之前有关男性生育力的大部分流行病学文献都集中在环境暴露、饮食因素和其他相关变量上,但对职业因素的关注甚少。
研究设计、规模、持续时间:本观察性研究包括 377 名在生育中心寻求不育治疗的夫妇中的男性伴侣,他们于 2005 年至 2019 年期间参加了环境与生殖健康(EARTH)研究。
参与者/材料、设置、方法:从带回家的问卷中收集关于举重物/移动重物、典型班次和工作时体力消耗水平的自我报告信息。根据世界卫生组织的指南分析精液样本。使用酶免疫测定法评估生殖激素浓度。线性回归模型用于评估职业因素与睾丸功能指标之间的关联,同时调整年龄、BMI、教育程度、种族、吸烟和禁欲时间等协变量,并在精液参数分析中考虑多个精液样本(平均值=2,最小值-最大值=1-9)。
男性的中位(四分位距)年龄为 36(33,39)岁,主要为白种人(87%)。在完成调查的男性中,12%的人报告经常在工作中举重物或移动重物,6%的人报告工作时体力消耗大,9%的人报告上夜班或倒班。与报告从未在工作中举重物或移动重物的男性相比,报告经常在工作中举重物或移动重物的男性精子浓度高 46%(P=0.01),总计数高 44%(P=0.01)。与上日班的男性相比,上夜班的男性工作中轮班或倒班的男性也有类似的结果,与工作中体力消耗较轻的男性相比,工作中体力消耗较重的男性的睾丸酮浓度也较高(调整后的平均值分别为 515 和 427ng/dl,P=0.08),与工作中体力消耗较轻的男性相比,工作中体力消耗较重的男性的雌二醇浓度也较高(调整后的平均值分别为 36.8 和 27.1pg/ml,P=0.07)。上夜班/倒班的男性睾丸酮浓度高 24%(P=0.04),雌二醇浓度高 45%(P=0.01),与上日班的男性相比。对于射出量、总活力、形态正常精子或血清 FSH 和 LH 浓度,未观察到相关性。
局限性、谨慎的原因:由于我们的研究设计招募了来自寻求生育治疗的夫妇的男性,因此我们的研究结果可能不适用于来自一般人群的男性。此外,由于所有基于自我报告问卷的研究都存在这种情况,因此暴露的测量误差和分类错误是潜在的问题。
体力要求高的工作和轮班或夜间工作职业可能与男性的睾丸功能更高有关,表现为精子浓度和计数更高,以及血清睾丸酮和雌二醇水平更高。在其他非生育诊所研究人群中证实这些发现是必要的。
研究资金/竞争利益:美国国立环境卫生科学研究所(NIEHS)和 Legacy,Inc. 的 NIH 拨款 R01ES022955、R01ES009718、R01ES033651 和 R01ES000002,以及 Legacy,Inc. 提供资金进行此分析。R.A.G. 是 Legacy,Inc. 的兼职员工,该公司提供了进行此项分析的资金。没有其他利益冲突。
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