Ecotoxicology and Environmental Safety (Sep 2021)
Differential impacts of particulate air pollution exposure on early and late stages of spermatogenesis
Abstract
Background: Despite increasing evidence that particulate air pollution has adverse effects on human semen quality, few studies examine the impact of air pollution on clinically relevant thresholds used to diagnose male fertility problems. Furthermore, exposure is often assessed using average air pollution levels in a geographic area rather than individualized estimates. Finally, physiologically-informed exposure windows are inconsistent. Objectives: We sought to test the hypothesis that airborne particulate exposures during early-phase spermatogenesis will have a differential impact on spermatogenic formation compared to late-phase exposures, using an individualized model of exposure to particulate matter ≤ 2.5 µm and ≤ 10 µm (PM2.5 and PM10, respectively). Methods: From an original cohort of 183 couples, we conducted a retrospective analysis of 130 healthy males seeking to become parents, using spermatogenesis-relevant exposure windows of 77–34 days and 37–0 days prior to semen collection to encompass sperm development stages of mitosis/meiosis and spermiogenesis, respectively. Individualized residential exposure to PM2.5 and PM10 was estimated by selecting multiple air pollution sensors within the same geographic air basin as participants and employing inverse distance weighting to calculate mean daily exposure levels. We used multiple logistic regression to assess the association between pollution, temperature, and dichotomized World Health Organization semen parameters. Results: During the early phase of spermatogenesis, air pollution exposure is associated with 1.52 (95% CI: 1.04–2.32) times greater odds of < 30% normal heads per 1-unit increase in IQR for PM2.5. In the late phase of spermatogenesis, air pollution exposure is associated with 0.35 (95% CI: 0.10–0.74) times greater odds of semen concentration < 15 million/mL per 1-unit increase in IQR for PM2.5, and 0.28 (95% CI: 0.07–0.72) for PM10. Conclusion: Particulate exposure has a differential and more deleterious impact on sperm during early-phase spermatogenesis than late-phase.