Israeli doctors push the limits of male fertility
Every sperm counts
To help her patient attain more masculine traits as he requested, Tordjman started him on high-dose testosterone therapy. “It didn’t make sense to give him testosterone therapy,” she says. “Men with androgen receptor insensitivity produce high testosterone levels. Because the receptor is abnormal, they’re unable to put it to use. At first it didn’t make a lot of sense but we tried it on the basis of another report.”
After several months of weekly injections, the patient appeared dramatically more masculine. He gained 18 pounds — mostly muscle — and grew hair on his face and body. His voice, which had always been high-pitched, did not change. (The voice, says Tordjman, is stubbornly resistant to hormone therapy.) The treatments continued for four years. The patient and his girlfriend got married and began talking about starting a family.
Before therapy, his sperm count was very low. But it rose along with his changing features. “What’s novel is that the quality of his sperm improved greatly,” she says. “It reinforced the hope that he might be able to become a father. I think I was more excited than he was.” At that point, Tordjman took another long shot and referred the couple for fertility treatment.
When Tordjman next saw the patient several years later, he was pushing his baby girl in a stroller. A few months ago, she saw him juggling newborn twins.
Children have a 50 percent chance of inheriting a mutation for androgen receptor insensitivity from a parent. While fathers have typically been left out of the equation given the male sterility associated with the condition, this case will force a rethinking of that belief and encourage the use of testosterone and fertility treatments in men with the condition, says Tordjman.
“There’s nothing revolutionary about what we did. The dogma is that these males are infertile,” she says. “But my message is there’s no harm in trying. In any case like this with partial androgen insensitivity, even if you don’t know where in the androgen receptor gene the mutation lies, testosterone treatment is worth trying. There’s no downside.”
Viva Sarah Press