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    Family blood relationships and fertility, the honest conversation

    Reviewed by HHH Clinical Team · April 2026

    3 sections · 2 min read

    Tests & Investigations
    2 minHHH clinical team
    WHY IS FAMILY CONSANGUINITY A FERTILITY TOPIC?

    Why is family consanguinity a fertility topic?

    In some South Asian communities, particularly Pakistani and Bangladeshi Muslim, and some Hindu and Sikh subgroups, marriages between first cousins or closer relatives have been common for generations. This is a private family matter for most people. It is also a piece of fertility and pregnancy information that matters to have.

    Children of first-cousin parents carry a somewhat higher risk of being born with certain genetic conditions. The absolute risk is usually modest, roughly double the baseline rate of serious genetic conditions, from around 2–3% to 4–6%, but it is real, and it is worth knowing.

    WHAT CAN YOU ACTUALLY DO WITH INFORMATION ABOUT FAMILY BLOOD RELATIONSHIPS?

    What can you actually do with information about family blood relationships?

    This is not a judgement on your family or your culture. It is information that helps you and your partner plan with full knowledge.

    HOW DOES FAMILY CONSANGUINITY AFFECT MALE FERTILITY SPECIFICALLY?

    How does family consanguinity affect male fertility specifically?

    In Pakistani populations specifically, rates of AZF ( factor) region abnormalities on the Y chromosome are higher than baseline. This is one contributor to male factor infertility that can be picked up on karyotype + Y microdeletion testing, tests that are part of standard work-up for low sperm count in UK andrology clinics.

    If your partner has had a showing significant abnormalities, asking about genetic testing is reasonable.

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    Reviewed by clinicians

    Authored and reviewed by clinicians from the founding team. Information only, not personalised medical advice.