| Literature DB >> 30159235 |
Brent M Hanson1, James M Hotaling2.
Abstract
Over the last several years, the male component of reproduction has begun to gain clinical momentum. The medical literature has traditionally focused on infertility from the female perspective, but recent publications have demonstrated that male infertility is an important marker of overall health for infertile men as well as their family members. In order to perform large-scale, quality research related to male infertility, comprehensive databases are necessary. Currently, research in male infertility is limited by the fact that there is not a centralized, comprehensive database specifically designed to collect patient information related to male fertility. A database of this nature exists for female infertility research in the form of the Society for Assisted Reproductive Technology (SART) clinical summary report and the National ART Surveillance System (NASS) published by the Centers for Disease Control (CDC). This review outlines the strengths and weaknesses of several male fertility data sources, including the National Survey of Family Growth, the Reproductive Medicine Network, the Andrology Research Consortium (ARC), the Truven Health MarketScan® databases, the Utah Population Database, and data available from the Ober Lab related to the Hutterites. While each of these sources has been instrumental in the creation of meaningful research within the field of male fertility, a need remains for the creation of a centralized database for use in future male fertility research. The ideal database would consist of vast amounts of patient data which link individuals and couples to biologic specimens as well as data from family members, designed with parameters specifically purposed for male fertility research. The use of electronic medical records (EMR) systems such as Epic may play a role in the development of such a database going forward. At present, although some information is available through current databases, researchers must utilize suboptimal data sources to perform studies.Entities:
Keywords: Database; male infertility; research strategy
Year: 2018 PMID: 30159235 PMCID: PMC6087848 DOI: 10.21037/tau.2018.04.18
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Transl Androl Urol ISSN: 2223-4683
Figure 1Obstacles to male fertility research.
Strengths and weaknesses of male fertility data sources
| Data source | Year established | Affiliation | URL | Strengths | Weaknesses |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| National Survey of Family Growth (NSFG) | 1973 | Centers for Disease Control (CDC) | Well-validated survey since 1973; nationally representative for ages 15–49; inclusion of male participants since 2002; approximately 5,000 interviews per year; assesses issues of pregnancy, fertility, contraception, general & reproductive health; over 600 journal articles published using NSFG | Originally designed for female respondents; limited scope related to infertility; limited information available for male infertility | |
| Reproductive Medicine Network (RMN) | 1989 | Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health & Human Development—NIH | Designed to perform multi-center clinical trials; landmark papers have been published related to male infertility from RMN trials; over 50 publications since 1990; data can be linked to biologic specimens | Poor recruitment for male trials; majority of focus is on female infertility; failed varicocelectomy trial; not specifically designed for male infertility | |
| Andrology Research Consortium (ARC) | 2013 | Society for the Study of Male Reproduction (SSMR) | Prospective questionnaire data; 14 different centers specializing in male infertility; specifically designed for male infertility; supported by SSMR; female fertility data available | Limited availability of biologic specimens; requires clinician involvement to ensure ongoing enrollment & completion of questionnaires; no significant publications to date; relatively small patient size compared to other databases (approximately 2,000) | |
| Truven Health MarketScan® | 1988 | Truven Health Analytics—IBM | Over 240 million patients included; population-level data; all claims included in data set; ability to link infertility parameters to other health issues | Retrospective data; limited ability to link male & female partners; not specifically designed for male infertility | |
| Utah Population Database (UPDB) | 1987 | University of Utah | Information on >8 million individuals in Utah; data linked to >100 million family members; 85% of Utah medical records included in UPDB; 6 generations of pedigree data; biologic specimens available | Retrospective data; not representative of US population; not specifically designed for male infertility | |
| The Hutterites & Ober Lab | 1994 | University of Chicago | 14-generation pedigree data available; fertility profiles obtained for nearly 300 couples; whole genome genetic data available; data available for males and females | Not representative of US population; founder population; not specifically designed for male infertility |