INICSA   23916
INSTITUTO DE INVESTIGACIONES EN CIENCIAS DE LA SALUD
Unidad Ejecutora - UE
artículos
Título:
Recategorisation of body mass index to achieve andrological predictive power: A study in more than 20 000 patients
Autor/es:
MOLINA, ROSA INÉS; TORRES, PEDRO JAVIER; SAD-LARCHER, JOSÉ; MARTINI, ANA CAROLINA; RAMÍREZ, NICOLÁS; LUQUE, EUGENIA MERCEDES; BELTRAMONE, FERNANDO; MANGEAUD, ARNALDO; TISSERA, ANDREA; BIANCONI, SANTIAGO; ESTOFÁN, GUSTAVO
Revista:
REPRODUCTION FERTILITY AND DEVELOPMENT
Editorial:
CSIRO PUBLISHING
Referencias:
Año: 2020 vol. 32 p. 648 - 656
ISSN:
1031-3613
Resumen:
The aim of this study was to recategorise body mass index (BMI) in order to classify patients according to their risk of semen abnormalities. Patients (n = 20 563) presenting at an andrology laboratory were classified into five groups according to BMI: underweight (BMI 40 kg m-2). Semen quality was evaluated to determine: (1) differences between groups using analysis of variance (ANOVA); (2) the chances of semen abnormalities (using generalised linear models, Chi-squared tests and odds ratios); (3) reference BMI values with andrological predictive power (multivariate conglomerate analyses and multivariate analysis of variance (MANOVA)); and (4) expected values of abnormalities for each new group resulting from BMI recategorisation. Morbidly obese and underweight patients exhibited the highest decrease in semen quality and had higher chances of semen abnormalities. The smallest number of sperm abnormalities was found at a BMI of 27 kg m-2. Four reference values were identified, recategorising BMI into four groups according to their risk of semen abnormalities (from lowest to highest risk): Group1,BMI between 20 and 32 kg m-2; Group2, BMI 32-37 kg m-2; Group3, BMI >37-42 kg m-2; and Group4, BMI >42 kg m-2. A BMI 32 kg m-2 is negatively associated with semen quality; these negative associations on semen quality increase from a BMI >37 kg m-2 and increase even further for BMI >42 kg m-2. The BMI recategorisation in this study has andrological predictive power.