Background: The massive weight loss induced by bariatric surgery is associated with major benefits, but the effect on semen variables is still uncertain.
Objectives: To explore semen modifications with gastric bypass and sleeve gastrectomy.
Setting: Five French University Hospitals.
Methods: Male candidates for bariatric surgery with no history of infertility were recruited in this controlled prospective study. Sperm characteristics were collected before surgery and then 6 months and up to 12 months after surgery.
Results: Forty-six adult men who underwent gastric bypass (n = 20) or sleeve gastrectomy (n = 26) were included. Total sperm count tended to be lower at 6 months and showed a significant decrease at 12 months in both surgery groups, at -69.5 million (-96.8 to -42.2 million; P = 0.0021). Total sperm count at 12 months relative to baseline was -41.4 million (P = .0391) after gastric bypass and -91.1 million (P = .0080) after sleeve gastrectomy. This was counterbalanced by an associated resolution of hypogonadism and decrease of DNA fragmentation in most patients with time after surgery.
Conclusion: Improvement in some semen variables after bariatric surgery observed in 3 previous studies is in contrast to the lower mean total sperm count found in this study at 1 year. The possible reversibility of this effect in the long term and the impact of surgery on fertility both remain unknown.
Keywords: Bariatric surgery; Fertility; Gastric bypass; Sleeve gastrectomy; Sperm count.
Copyright © 2019 American Society for Bariatric Surgery. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.