The human Y chromosome is shrinking. In the next 5 million years or so, some geneticists think the sex-determining chromosome will vanish completely from our species. But for men alive today, there is a more immediate concern.
As some men age, they are losing the Y chromosome in their blood, brain, or immune cells — and that loss comes with serious health consequences.
For decades, researchers have noticed that as some men grow older, certain cells in their bodies begin to lose their Y chromosome. Among 70-year-old men, roughly 40 percent show loss of Y in their blood cells. Among 93-year-olds, that number rises to 57 percent.
Once, this loss was considered a “benign” marker of aging. But emerging genetic evidence suggests that a lack of the Y chromosome in some cells may be actively contributing to death and disease.
The Hidden Danger
The Y chromosome is crucial for sex determination and sperm function, but historically, it wasn’t thought to do much else. Of all 46 chromosomes contained in most human cells, the Y chromosome is the only one that can be lost without the cell dying. But that does not mean it can disappear without issue.

In 2022, a study found that when specialized immune cells in the hearts of mice lacked Y chromosomes, it led to cardiovascular dysfunction and death. Further clinical studies suggest that among elderly men, those who show Y chromosome losses are more likely to die early or develop cancer.
In 2023, researchers found that up to 40 percent of older men with bladder cancer lack the Y chromosome in their tumors. Because men are up to five times more likely to develop bladder cancer than women, this led scientists to suspect that the Y chromosome was playing a role in the disease.
The Immune System Connection
Preliminary evidence supports that idea. In 2025, a study found that immune cells lacking the Y chromosome are less effective at attacking cancerous cells. That same year, a review concluded that the loss of the Y chromosome is likely to be important in shaping the activity of the male immune system.
Even though the Y chromosome contains roughly 0.9 percent of the total DNA in a male cell, it was only fully sequenced a few years ago. Since then, advances in genomic sequencing have ushered in a new era for Y chromosome research, revealing that it may be involved in more cellular functions than scientists previously assumed.
The Evolutionary Debate
Evolutionary biologist Jennifer Hughes thinks the Y chromosome is not doomed to vanish from our species. “The genes that are retained on the Y serve crucial functions across the whole body, so the selective pressure to maintain those genes is too great for them to be lost,” she explained.
But evolutionary biologist Jenny Graves argues that important genes can always be “picked up” by other chromosomes. “Yes, there are deeply conserved core genes,” she said. “But the spiny rat and mole vole had no trouble relocating or replacing them.” Those mammals no longer have a Y chromosome; another chromosome has taken over the role of sex determination instead.
Today, the human Y retains only 3 percent of its ancestral genes.
The Bottom Line
As men age, they can lose the Y chromosome in their blood, brain, or immune cells — a phenomenon once thought benign but now linked to serious health risks. Studies show that men with Y chromosome loss are more likely to die early, develop cancer, and have less effective immune responses against tumors. Up to 40 percent of older men with bladder cancer lack the Y chromosome in their tumors. While the Y chromosome may eventually vanish from our species over millions of years, for aging men today, the health cost of losing it is finally becoming clear.





