Women who want to to get pregnant should refrain from using cannabis. This is the conclusion of a new study that examined the influence of the substance, and its active ingredient THC in particular, on female fertility and artificial insemination. Researchers found that can negatively affect both because it disrupts the development and stability of the egg cell.
During in vitro fertilization (IVF), egg and sperm cells are brought together in a laboratory. The authors investigated both the effects of THC on isolated human eggs in the laboratory and the IVF results of patients with detectable THC in their follicular fluid. This is the fluid in the ovary that surrounds the egg, where detectable THC means that the woman consumed cannabis before or during the IVF cycle, and that the THC reached the egg cell environment.
The study was conducted by a team supervised by post-doctoral research fellow Cyntia Duval at the CReATe Fertility Centre in Toronto, Canada, in collaboration with scientists from the University of Toronto and other institutions. It examined a total of 1,059 women undergoing IVF, 62 of whom tested positive for THC.
The rates of egg maturation, fertilization, and blastocyst development were examined in THC-positive patients. The blastocyst is the stage of development where the egg implants in the uterus, which is particularly important for a successful
The study also analyzed possible errors in cell division and the probability of an embryo having a healthy set of chromosomes (euploidy). An abnormal set of chromosomes (aneuploidy) is often the cause of miscarriages.
Disruption to egg development and genetic stability
The result was clear: THC-positive patients had a significantly lower rate of euploid embryos, which means that the probability of genetically healthy embryos and a successful pregnancy was reduced.
Although eggs mature slightly faster and more frequently in patients with THC in their follicular fluid, they had significantly with a healthy chromosome set (60% compared to 67% in control subjects). This can reduce the chances of a successful pregnancy and a healthy child.
In the laboratory, THC led to more errors in chromosome distribution and to a defective egg cell structure. Spindle malformations were observed significantly more frequently, especially at higher THC doses. The spindle morphology is important for correct cell division, where errors can result in miscarriages or developmental disorders.
Genetic analyses conducted as part of the study suggest that THC alters the activity of genes in the egg cell that are responsible for the correct distribution of genetic material during cell division. THC also influences genes that control the extracellular matrix — a network of proteins and other molecules that stabilizes cells and is important for embryo implantation and development.
Further research needed, German experts say
The findings on the spindle apparatus are significant, according to Dr. Artur Mayerhofer, head of a working group at the Biomedical Center at the Ludwig Maximilian University (LMU) of Munich, who was not involved in the study: “In my opinion, this is the best data available,” he said, but added that he also takes a critical view. “Disorders of the spindle apparatus also increase with a woman’s age. So far this has not been taken into account in the study — the number of cases is too small for meaningful statistics.”
Dr. Wolfgang Paulus, senior physician and head of the reproductive toxicology center at the Ulm University Hospital, who was also not involved in the study, takes a similar view: “Patients with are older on average and more likely to have genetic predispositions, which is why successful pregnancies are often not recorded. THC may have fewer effects on reproduction in young women with no genetic abnormalities.” Future studies should therefore examine the effects of THC on different age groups, he said.
Paulus also criticized the study for lacking information on how much cannabis was consumed in each case: “One limitation of the present study is the lack of data on cannabis consumption habits, such as frequency, timing, dosage, and type of consumption,” he said.
Despite the important findings, the mechanism of action of THC remains unclear, according to the LMU’s Artur Mayerhofer. “Studies on one type of cell — such as oocytes in a clinical IVF setting — provide only limited information about systemic effects and thus their ‘significance in everyday life,’” he said. Future studies should examine “influential factors that have not been taken into account, such as the consumption of other drugs,” he said.
This article was originally written in German.
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