PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

No link to birth defects for potential fathers taking metformin for diabetes

Latest study is reassuring for potential fathers and their partners

2024-10-16
(Press-News.org) Potential fathers with type 2 diabetes can be reassured that taking the drug metformin is not associated with birth defects in their offspring, concludes a large study of more than 3 million pregnancies published by The BMJ today. 

The researchers say the findings show that metformin can continue to be considered a suitable drug for managing blood sugar levels in men with type 2 diabetes who plan on having children.

Metformin is widely used to treat type 2 diabetes in men of reproductive age, but a recent Danish study reported a link between metformin use by fathers-to-be and an increased risk of congenital malformations, particularly genital, in male infants.

However, questions about the biological plausibility and causality between paternal metformin use and risk of congenital malformations in offspring remain unresolved.

To provide further guidance on this issue, researchers set out to evaluate the association between paternal metformin use and risk of congenital malformations in offspring from Norway and Taiwan.

Using national birth registries and prescription databases, they identified 619,389 offspring with paternal data during the period of sperm development (three months before pregnancy) in Norway during 2010-21 and 2,563,812 in Taiwan during 2004-18.

Among these, fathers of 2,075 (0.3%) offspring in Norway and 15,276 (0.6%) offspring in Taiwan used metformin during the sperm development period.

In Norway, congenital malformations were found in 24,041 (3.9%) offspring of fathers who did not use metformin during the period of sperm development, compared with 104 (5%) offspring of fathers who used metformin. 

Similarly, in Taiwan, congenital malformations were found in 79,278 (3.1%) offspring of fathers who did not use metformin, compared with 512 (3.4%) offspring of fathers who used metformin.

But after restricting analyses to fathers with type 2 diabetes, and adjusting for other important factors, such as father’s age and related conditions, no increased risk of any congenital malformations among infants born to fathers who used metformin during the sperm development period was found in either Norway or Taiwan. 

And no notable increases in risk were found for any specific organ malformations, including genital malformations.

These are observational findings, so can’t establish cause, and the authors acknowledge that diagnostic data may not be completely accurate and there may have been misclassification of drug use. Nor can they rule out the possibility that other unmeasured factors may have affected their results.

However, findings were consistent after further analyses accounting for genetic and family factors, suggesting that they withstand scrutiny. 

As such, they conclude: “These results provide reassurance and can assist clinicians in making informed treatment decisions when selecting metformin in the treatment of type 2 diabetes mellitus among men who are planning a family.”

In a linked editorial, researchers in Australia say differences in the quality of the data available and the analyses conducted may help explain the inconsistent findings of this and the Danish study.

The lack of a known biological mechanism also adds to the case against a link between paternal metformin use and fetal malformations. 

“For some, these findings may not completely lay to rest concerns raised by the Danish analyses, and further confirmatory studies are worthwhile,” they write. “At the very least, however, these findings provide some reassurance for clinicians, and for fathers-to-be prescribed metformin preconception.”

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

For multiple sclerosis, medication and cognitive behavioral therapy can reduce fatigue

2024-10-16
In a study of commonly used treatments for people with multiple sclerosis, both medical and behavioral interventions, and a combination of the two, resulted in meaningful improvements in fatigue, a University of Michigan-led study finds. The randomized clinical trial compared the effectiveness of modafinil, a wake-promoting medication used to treat sleepiness in people with sleep disorders, and cognitive behavioral therapy, or CBT, on reducing fatigue for over 300 adults with multiple sclerosis whose symptoms interfered with their ...

Children with multiple long-term conditions hospitalized with COVID are almost three times more likely to die: New study

2024-10-16
Individuals with multiple long-term conditions are two and a half times more likely to die following COVID-19 infection than others. When children were assessed separately the risk for mortality among those with multiple long-term conditions increased to almost three times (2.8) the risk of those without. The mortality rates are 22% and 8% respectively.  That is according to an authoritative systematic review and meta-analysis of over four million patients with COVID-19 published today (Thursday 17 October) in the Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine.  The authors are calling for patients with multiple long-term conditions ...

8% GDP loss by 2050 foreseen due to world water crisis; more than 50% of food production at risk: Global Commission on the Economics of Water

8% GDP loss by 2050 foreseen due to world water crisis; more than 50% of food production at risk: Global Commission on the Economics of Water
2024-10-16
Paris — An international group of leaders and experts warns that unless humanity acts with greater boldness and urgency, an increasingly out-of-balance water cycle will wreak havoc on economies and humanity worldwide. In a landmark report, The Economics of Water: Valuing the Hydrological Cycle as a Global Common Good, the Global Commission on the Economics of Water says the water crisis puts at risk more than half of the world’s food production by 2050. It also threatens an 8% loss of GDP in countries around the world on average by 2050, with as much ...

Nanoparticle therapy offers new hope for prostate cancer patients

Nanoparticle therapy offers new hope for prostate cancer patients
2024-10-16
Prostate cancer is the second leading cause of cancer death among American men.  A ground-breaking study, conducted by researchers from the University of Virginia, Mount Sinai, the University of Michigan, the University of Texas and others, has demonstrated the clinical success of a new nanoparticle-based, laser-guided therapy for prostate cancer treatment.  The study, which involved 44 men with localized prostate cancer, used gold nanoshellss in combination with magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and ultrasound fusion — an ...

UVA researchers engineer AI breakthrough in human action detection technology

UVA researchers engineer AI breakthrough in human action detection technology
2024-10-16
What if a security camera could not only capture video but understand what’s happening — distinguishing between routine activities and potentially dangerous behavior in real time? That’s the future being shaped by researchers at the University of Virginia’s School of Engineering and Applied Science with their latest breakthrough: an AI-driven intelligent video analyzer capable of detecting human actions in video footage with unprecedented precision and intelligence. The system, called the Semantic and Motion-Aware Spatiotemporal Transformer Network (SMAST), promises a wide range of ...

Bolstering the fight against antibiotic-resistant bacteria

2024-10-16
GAINESVILLE, Fla. — University of Florida Health scientists exploring how combinations of antibiotics can fight resistant bacteria have been awarded an $11.8 million grant for work that could help save the tens of thousands of lives lost yearly to infections that are increasingly plaguing humanity. The National Institutes of Health, or NIH, grant to the UF College of Medicine and the UF College of Pharmacy will support scientists working to uncover the mechanics of how bacteria and antibiotics interact, down to the molecular level. That mechanistic knowledge ...

Deep learning illuminates atmospheric blocking events of past, future

Deep learning illuminates atmospheric blocking events of past, future
2024-10-16
Atmospheric blocking events are persistent, high-impact weather patterns that occur when large-scale high-pressure systems become stationary and divert the jet stream and storm tracks for days to weeks, and can be associated with record-breaking flooding or heat waves, such as in Europe in 2023. In a new study, University of Hawai‘i at Mānoa atmospheric scientist Christina Karamperidou used a deep learning model to infer the frequency of blocking events over the past 1,000 years and shed light on how future climate change may impact these significant phenomena.    “This study set out to extract a paleoweather signal from ...

Kidney transplantation among those with HIV infections shown safe and effective

2024-10-16
It is just as safe and effective for people with HIV in need of kidney transplantation to get their organ from donors who are also HIV positive as it is from donors who are not infected with the virus, a new study shows. Survival rates for organ recipients one and three years after the procedure were the same for donors with or without HIV. Also the same were risks of serious side effects, such as infection, fever, and rejection in the donated organ. In what is the largest comparative trial of the experimental procedures since the first transplant was performed in the United States in 2016, researchers ...

Longer-term data from SWOG S1826 trial confirm nivolumab-AVD benefit in Hodgkin lymphoma

2024-10-16
In mid-2023, the SWOG S1826 phase 3 trial in advanced Hodgkin lymphoma reported highly positive primary results earlier than expected, after the trial’s second planned interim analysis found the preset threshold for efficacy had already been reached.  Now, a follow-up analysis with additional data – a median follow-up of 2.1 years – confirms the durability of those initial findings: among the 970 newly diagnosed adolescents and adults randomized to the trial, those who received a combination of nivolumab plus AVD chemotherapy (N-AVD) had a significantly lower risk of cancer progression ...

In landmark study, immunotherapy boosts survival of advanced Hodgkin lymphoma

2024-10-16
A treatment that rallies the immune system to destroy cancer raised the survival rate for advanced Hodgkin lymphoma patients to a remarkable 92 percent, suggesting a new standard therapy for the disease. The New England Journal of Medicine published the innovative clinical trial results this week. Young people are most at risk to get Hodgkin lymphoma, an uncommon blood and immune system cancer that falls within the general category of lymphomas. With this new treatment, scientists believe they ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Pursuing the biological mechanisms and diversity of marine life through international collaboration

Europe’s First ever conference for minoritised life scientists set for Spring 2025

mRNA vaccines for disease outbreaks can be synthesized in less time with new technique

UK health leaders urge chancellor to invest in a smoke-free UK

No link to birth defects for potential fathers taking metformin for diabetes

For multiple sclerosis, medication and cognitive behavioral therapy can reduce fatigue

Children with multiple long-term conditions hospitalized with COVID are almost three times more likely to die: New study

8% GDP loss by 2050 foreseen due to world water crisis; more than 50% of food production at risk: Global Commission on the Economics of Water

Nanoparticle therapy offers new hope for prostate cancer patients

UVA researchers engineer AI breakthrough in human action detection technology

Bolstering the fight against antibiotic-resistant bacteria

Deep learning illuminates atmospheric blocking events of past, future

Kidney transplantation among those with HIV infections shown safe and effective

Longer-term data from SWOG S1826 trial confirm nivolumab-AVD benefit in Hodgkin lymphoma

In landmark study, immunotherapy boosts survival of advanced Hodgkin lymphoma

Kidney transplantation between donors and recipients with HIV is safe

Brown researchers show how gut hormones control aging in flies and how it relates to human biology

Which clot-busting drug is tied to better recovery after stroke?

Study: breast cancer drug shows potential for rare appendix cancer

Specific type of DNA could be a target of future cancer therapies

New Director of the Bates Center for the Study of the History of Nursing

Scientists developing microchips with brain and lung tissue to study viral neuroinflammation

Discover science: Applications open for summer 2025 undergraduate internships

Can electricity treat high blood pressure?

Microplastics detected in dolphin breath

Global north’s growing appetite for farmed salmon imperils communities’ access to local fish

e-Flower records neuronal activity with electronic petals

Aquaculture uses far more wild fish than previously estimated, study finds

Gene editing approach paves the way to first-in-human clinical trial for rare genetic disease

Compositional evolution of the upper mantle driven by plate tectonics

[Press-News.org] No link to birth defects for potential fathers taking metformin for diabetes
Latest study is reassuring for potential fathers and their partners