| Older Fathers Raise the Risk of Having Children with Schizophrenia | |
New York, April 12, 2001 - While older women run a higher risk of having babies with
birth defects, it has long been presumed that men could have healthy children at
any age. Think again. A new study now shows that older fathers are far more
likely to have children with schizophrenia, while the age of the mother appears
to have no influence on the likelihood of her offspring developing this
devastating disease.
The study showed a strong, steady increase in the risk of having children with
the disease as men aged. Men aged 45 to 49 were twice as likely to have children
with schizophrenia as men under the age of 25 who became fathers, while the risk
tripled for men over the age of 50, according to an analysis of a large
population of over 85,000 people by researchers from New York University School
of Medicine, Columbia University College of Physicians & Surgeons, and
Israel's Ministry of Health.
"Women are often made to feel responsible for problems occurring during
pregnancy, especially if anything goes wrong with their children's health, but
this new study shows that men also contribute," says Susan Harlap, M.D.,
Research Professor of Epidemiology in the Department of Obstetrics and
Gynecology at NYU School of Medicine and an author of the new study.
"There has been some previous research showing that men contribute to rare
genetic abnormalities in their offspring. Schizophrenia, by comparison, is
common, affecting 1% of all populations worldwide," says Dr. Harlap.
"I would guess that our study is just the tip of the iceberg. Eventually it
would seem that the father's sperm is going to turn out to be just as important
as the mother's egg."
The new findings, however, shouldn't deter older men from becoming fathers, says
Dr. Harlap. "I don't think that older men should disqualify themselves from
becoming parents. At any particular age, there is always a trade-off. Our study
suggests that a man's progeny are going to be healthiest if he has his children
during his early 20s. But we know that many men aren't ready for marriage and
parenthood at that age. A man may want to wait until he is mature enough and
economically stable enough to have children, even though there are health risks
involved in having children at an older age."
The study, published in the April issue of the journal Archives of General
Psychiatry, is the first time advancing paternal age has been linked to a
psychiatric rather than a physical illness, says Dolores Malaspina, M.D.,
Associate Professor of Clinical Psychiatry at Columbia University College of
Physicians & Surgeons and lead author of the study. "A man has a
biological clock, too. Men should be aware of the risks when they do their
family planning," she said.
Overall, the researchers found that 26.6% of the schizophrenia cases could be
attributed to the dad's age. And for fathers over the age of 50, two out of
three cases of schizophrenia among their children could be attributed to the
effects of paternal age.
Schizophrenia is a devastating brain disorder and the most disabling of severe
mental illnesses. It afflicts about 1.1 percent of adults or about 2.2 million
people in the United States, according to the National Institute of Mental
Health. About the same percentage are affected in countries around the world,
which is one of the puzzles of the disease. If caused by environmental factors,
then presumably the disease would only arise in certain parts of the world. No
one knows what causes schizophrenia, but it is suspected that many genes
contribute to it.
The researchers believe that the new study can explain why the incidence of
schizophrenia remains fairly constant in all populations over time. They suggest
that new mutations are being introduced at a constant rate in the disease genes.
In older men, the cells that eventually become sperm have already divided
hundreds of times. Each of these divisions, like a lottery, has been an
opportunity for chance mutations to occur in one or more of the genes causing
schizophrenia. On the other hand, a woman's egg cells divide only 24 times, and
almost all the divisions occur during fetal life. So it is less likely that new
mutations would be transmitted through a woman's egg.
The study used data assembled from two sources: a large population-based
research database called the Jerusalem Perinatal Study and a national Israeli
registry of psychiatric disease. The psychiatric registry, established by the
Ministry of Health in 1950, receives information about all psychiatric
illnesses, including reports from patients admitted to psychiatric wards within
general hospitals and psychiatric day-care facilities. The Jerusalem Perinatal
Study at Hebrew University surveyed the health of more than 90,000 children born
in Jerusalem from 1964 to 1976. Both databases are strictly confidential and the
research team in the U.S. was allowed access to the files only after the names
and other identifying information had been removed.
Of the 1,337 individuals in the study who were admitted to psychiatric units
before 1998, 658 were diagnosed with schizophrenia and related psychoses,
according to the study. After controlling for a number of factors (a statistical
method that adjusts certain variables to reveal associations), including
maternal age, the researchers found that paternal age was strongly associated
with a diagnosis of schizophrenia, but not with the other psychiatric disorders.
ABOUT DR. HARLAP - Dr. Harlap is Research Professor of Epidemiology in the
Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology at NYU School of Medicine. Her research
has focused on many women's health issues, including the benefits and risks of
birth control pills, effects of alcohol on the fetus, birth defects, infant
deaths, fertility, and infertility. Her current research interests include how
breast, ovarian and other cancers of the reproductive system affect fertility.
Previously, Dr. Harlap was affiliated with Hebrew University-Hadassah Medical
School in Israel. As a research physician in Israel, she published important
findings from the Jerusalem Perinatal Study, which she ran for from 1967 to
1976. The individuals in the study have been followed up until the present day.
---NYU Medical School
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