Site icon Scientific Inquirer

Paternal use of metformin during sperm production not associated with major birth defects

A study of almost 400,000 live births found that paternal use of metformin monotherapy was not associated with major congenital malformations (MCMs) in newborns. Associations between metformin in polytherapy and birth defects could potentially be explained by worse underlying parental cardiometabolic risk profile of those taking multiple diabetes medications. The study is published in Annals of Internal Medicine.  

Researchers from Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, Kahn-Sagol-Maccabi (KSM) Research and Innovation Institute, and Brigham and Women’s Hospital studied data from a large Israeli health fund from 1999 to 2020 to assess the potential adverse intergenerational effect of metformin use during the sperm production period preceding conception.


Embrace the charm of nostalgia with our Vintage-Inspired Contemplative Pooh-Bear Graphic T-Shirt. The “Winnie” in Winnie-the-Pooh was based on a Canadian Brown Bear, aka Ursus americanus, named Winnipeg.

MCMs and parental cardiometabolic conditions were ascertained using clinical diagnoses, medication dispensing information, and laboratory test results. Although crude findings suggested that metformin was associated with increased risk of MCM (6.2% versus 4.7% when father used no diabetic medication), this association did not persist with adjustment for paternal cardiovascular and metabolic co-morbid conditions and exclusion of children born to mothers with diabetes or hyperglycemia (to eliminate possible effects mediated through the mother).



Fathers prescribed metformin and other diabetic medication were more likely to be older, with co-existent cardiovascular and metabolic conditions, to be smokers and to have fertility problems. Similarly, mothers were more likely to have cardiovascular co-morbidity and to have experienced fertility problems when the father used metformin.


Universe expansion still accelerating say astronomers
Astronomers confirm the universe's expansion is accelerating as previously established, refuting claims …
Social media use linked to poorer mental health in early adolescence
Adolescents using social media over two hours daily face higher depression risks, …
From dusk till dawn
Astronomers, using the James Webb Space Telescope, found temperature and chemical differences …
Understanding how brain aneurysms form may help predict ruptures
A UC San Francisco study reveals key brain cell interactions that weaken …

Exit mobile version