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1 than female gametes and often increase with paternal age.
2 g habits, and they differed only slightly by paternal age.
3 no significant effects, after adjusting for paternal age.
4 ts (dnSNVs), that accumulate with increasing paternal age.
5 in males than in females and increases with paternal age.
6 y status, federal program participation, and paternal age.
7 psychiatric disorder (lifetime PD); and (3) paternal age.
8 s were de novo and associated with increased paternal age.
9 proportion of mutants, which decreases with paternal age.
10 enetic alterations associated with advancing paternal age.
11 al evidence for an increase in mutation with paternal age.
12 Much less is known about the impact of paternal age.
13 of autism risk with increasing maternal and paternal age.
14 tism associated with increasing maternal and paternal age.
15 no association with ASD after adjusting for paternal age.
16 n spectra between the sexes and at different paternal ages.
17 ce regarding the impact of both maternal and paternal ages.
18 DNMs in the offspring after controlling for paternal age (0.51 additional mutations per year, 95% CI
20 32; 95% CI: 0.11, 0.54; P < 0.01), and older paternal age (adjusted coefficient: 33.27; 95% CI: 4.10,
21 consisting of 9 clinical features: advanced paternal age, advanced maternal age, childhood maltreatm
25 ction effects were observed between advanced paternal age and maternal age, as well as paternal alcoh
26 rved an inverse U-shaped association between paternal age and offspring AH4 score with the lowest sco
27 re established associations between advanced paternal age and offspring risk for psychiatric and deve
29 Through logistic regression adjusting for paternal age and race (and, in a subset, for maternal ag
31 ant, monotonic association between advancing paternal age and risk of adult schizophrenia and schizop
34 xamined the association between maternal and paternal age and subgroups of trisomy 21 defined by pare
36 anation for the association between advanced paternal age and various neurodevelopmental disorders bu
38 story of psychiatric disorders, maternal and paternal age, and parental educational and employment st
41 es as well as additional reports of advanced paternal age associated with paternal origin of three sp
43 to better understand the association between paternal age at birth and hematological malignancies.
44 ication were verbal IQ for the ASD/ID genes, paternal age at birth for the DBE genes and adaptive fun
45 ippines, we first replicate the finding that paternal age at birth is associated with longer TL in of
47 (including sex, year of birth, maternal and paternal age at birth, and parity), for smoking 10 or mo
49 est parental educational level, maternal and paternal age at childbirth, offspring birth year, offspr
52 Studies in humans have revealed that the paternal age at conception explains most of the variatio
53 ial confounders (maternal age at conception, paternal age at conception, parental psychiatric history
54 positive causal effects of both maternal and paternal age at first birth on children's test scores at
55 identify the causal effects of maternal and paternal age at first birth on children's test scores ba
56 xposure or associated with both maternal and paternal age at Holocaust exposure were in the same dire
58 9, 1.64, 1.42, 1.16, and 0.92; in women, for paternal age at MI of <50, 50 to 59, and >/=60 years, th
63 ) in offspring is positively correlated with paternal age at the time of the offspring conception.
65 dings suggest that variation in maternal and paternal ages at breeding could contribute substantially
68 ational landscape in canids is determined by paternal age, body size, and CpG Islands recombination.
69 of DNMs in offspring increases not only with paternal age, but also with maternal age, and that some
71 2.32, and 2.74 among those of each increased paternal age category (27-<32, 32-<38, and > or =38 year
72 in (4:1 bias) and positively correlated with paternal age, consistent with the modest increased risk
74 n association with rare disorders related to paternal age (e.g., Apert syndrome, achondroplasia), thi
75 tant sperm over time-explaining the observed paternal age effect associated with these disorders-and
76 autosomal dominant disorders show a dramatic paternal age effect due to selfish mutations: substituti
77 ts age, and thus selection could explain the paternal age effect for Apert syndrome and other genetic
78 This identifies the biological basis of the paternal age effect for new mutations previously suggest
83 estes suggests that the common factor in the paternal age effect lies in the dysregulation of spermat
84 a statistically significant epidemiological paternal age effect of 6.3 years excess for fathers of M
85 n seven to eight times that of females and a paternal age effect of three mutations per year of fathe
86 syndrome (HRAS), which we collectively term "paternal age effect" (PAE) disorders, provides a good mo
95 interval: 1.1, 1.6; adjusted odds ratio for paternal age > or =40 years vs. 25-29 years = 1.4, 95% c
98 The risk of IF (n = 735) increased with paternal age >= 35, while it remained similarly lower am
99 n the second, third, and oldest quartiles of paternal age had 1.2, 1.3, and 1.7 times increased risk
100 comparison analyses indicated that advancing paternal age had a dose-response relationship with every
104 crease in autism risk with both maternal and paternal age has potential implications for public healt
105 schizophrenia was associated with advancing paternal age in a population-based birth cohort of 87 90
108 on in mutation rate: Each additional year of paternal age in humans leads to approximately 1.5 additi
112 Research has shown that higher maternal and paternal age is positively associated with children's ed
113 5.84) than did controls after adjustment for paternal age, low maternal education, race, residence, g
114 socioeconomic metrics, including maternal or paternal age <25 years, low education (9-10 years), unem
115 n-years among sons in the lowest quartile of paternal age (<27 years), to 2.00, 2.32, and 2.74 among
116 r female), race, and ethnicity; maternal and paternal age; maternal education; combined annual househ
117 ma over time; a similar effect of increasing paternal age may be due to the same selection process.
119 age, maternal body mass index, maternal age, paternal age, newborn sex, newborn ethnicity, season of
120 46 195 453 births, with an overall mean (SD) paternal age of 31.5 (6.8) years and 484 507 (1.1%) invo
121 nal age of 30.2 (18.6) years and a mean (SD) paternal age of 32.8 (13.1) years; 51.1% of offspring we
122 the OR for IF was 1.50 (95%CI 1.16-1.93) at paternal age of 35-<40 years, 2.06 (1.34-3.16) at 40-<45
125 We additionally investigated the role of paternal age on offspring sociability, a proxy for norma
131 rter telomeres than children from the U.S.A. Paternal age (P = 0.019) was positively associated with
132 ed for calendar year, age, sex, maternal and paternal age, place of residence at birth, and somatic c
133 observed to arise in fathers, and increasing paternal age positively correlates with the risk of new
134 d not differ in distributions of maternal or paternal age, previous livebirths, maternal smoking, or
135 c risk for schizophrenia was associated with paternal age (R(2) = 0.002; P = 1e-04), and offspring ed
136 (AMCHS) interviewed 1910 infertile couples (paternal age ranged 22-57 years) to look for risk factor
137 g data, we estimate the relationship between paternal-age-related dnSNVs and risk for five disorders:
140 nt with the clinical observation of advanced paternal age resulting in new cases of achondroplasia an
141 trend by adjusting for birth year, advanced paternal age showed no association with offspring IQ; ho
143 droplasia have been associated with advanced paternal age, suggesting that these mutations occur pref
144 ber of DNMs increases at a constant rate for paternal age, the contribution from the mother increases
145 academic morbidity associated with advancing paternal age using several quasi-experimental designs, i
146 oportional hazards regression, we found that paternal age was a strong and significant predictor of t
147 rval: 1.32, 1.44), and a 10-year increase in paternal age was associated with a 22% increase (odds ra
151 perinatal factors, every 10-year increase in paternal age was consistently associated with greater us
152 ternal age (> or =40 years) became null when paternal age was included in the statistical model.
154 mia and central nervous system tumors, older paternal age was not associated with risk of either type
159 radic AS births increases exponentially with paternal age, we hypothesized that the frequency of AS m
160 ion, and other covariates, both maternal and paternal age were independently associated with autism (
163 ether there is an independent association of paternal age with implantation failure (IF) in couples u
164 There was a joint effect of maternal and paternal age with increasing risk of ASD for couples wit
165 le is known about the interactive effects of paternal age with maternal age, paternal smoking and alc