An Indiana University study in 
collaboration with medical researchers from Karolinska Institute in 
Stockholm has found that advancing paternal age at childbearing can lead
 to higher rates of psychiatric and academic problems in offspring than 
previously estimated.
Examining an immense data set — everyone
 born in Sweden from 1973 until 2001 — the researchers documented a 
compelling association between advancing paternal age at childbearing 
and numerous psychiatric disorders and educational problems in their 
children, including autism, ADHD, bipolar disorder, schizophrenia, 
suicide attempts and substance abuse problems. Academic problems 
included failing grades, 
low educational attainment and low IQ scores.
Among the findings: When compared to a 
child born to a 24-year-old father, a child born to a 45-year-old father
 is 3.5 times more likely to have autism, 13 times more likely to have 
ADHD, two times more likely to have a psychotic disorder, 25 times more 
likely to have bipolar disorder and 2.5 times more likely to have 
suicidal behaviour or a substance abuse problem.
For most of these problems, the 
likelihood of the disorder increased steadily with advancing paternal 
age, suggesting there is no particular paternal age at childbearing that
 suddenly becomes problematic.
“We were shocked by the findings,” said 
Brian D’Onofrio, lead author and associate professor in the Department 
of Psychological and Brain Sciences in the College of Arts and Sciences 
at IU Bloomington. “The specific associations with paternal age were 
much, much larger than in previous studies. In fact, we found that 
advancing paternal age was associated with greater risk for several 
problems, such as ADHD, suicide attempts and substance use problems, 
whereas traditional research designs suggested advancing paternal age 
may have diminished the rate at which these problems occur.”
The study, “Parental Age at Childbearing and Offspring Psychiatric and Academic Morbidity,” was published in JAMA Psychiatry.
Notably, the researchers found 
converging evidence for the associations with advancing paternal age at 
childbearing from multiple research designs for a broad range of 
problems in offspring. By comparing siblings, which accounts for all 
factors that make children living in the same house similar, researchers
 discovered that the associations with advancing paternal age were much 
greater than estimates in the general population. By comparing cousins, 
including first-born cousins, the researchers could examine whether 
birth order or the influences of one sibling on another could account 
for the findings.
The authors also statistically 
controlled for parents’ highest level of education and income, factors 
often thought to counteract the negative effects of advancing paternal 
age because older parents are more likely to be more mature and 
financially stable. The findings were remarkably consistent, however, as
 the specific associations with advancing paternal age remained.
“The findings in this study are more 
informative than many previous studies,” D’Onofrio said. “First, we had 
the largest sample size for a study on paternal age. Second, we 
predicted numerous psychiatric and academic problems that are associated
 with significant impairment. Finally, we were able to estimate the 
association between paternal age at childbearing and these problems 
while comparing differentially exposed siblings, as well as cousins. 
These approaches allowed us to control for many factors that other 
studies could not.”

The results of D'Onofrio et al. have been alarmingly exaggerated due to errors in the press release put out by Dr. D'Onofrio. See my blog post http://ow.ly/v6ehS for details.
ReplyDeleteSteve Herman, PhD
Associate Professor of Psychology
University of Hawaii at Hilo