This study evaluated the influence of sperm origin and basic sperm parameters on blastocyst implantation competence.
The study included 2912 embryos obtained from 370 patients undergoing intracytoplasmic sperm injection cycles, with embryo transfer on day 5 of development. The embryos were divided into experimental groups according to their origin: (i) embryos originated from ejaculated-derived spermatozoa (Ejaculated group, n = 2093), from epididymal-derived spermatozoa (Epididymal group, n = 463) and from testicular-derived spermatozoa (Testicular group, n = 356). The groups were compared in relation to their blastocyst implantation competence. In addition, the influence of sperm parameters on blastocyst implantation was investigated. The sperm origin was determinant to the success of implantation. When blastocysts originating from testicle-derived spermatozoa were transferred, 66.4% implanted, while only 35.8 and 48.6% of blastocysts originated from epididymis- and ejaculate-derived spermatozoa implanted respectively (p = 0.001). The sperm volume and concentration were increased in cycles in which the implantation rate was 100 compared to the 0% implantation rate cases; however, the sperm motility and morphology did not differ among the groups. These results suggest that, with the exception of sperm volume and concentration, the male factor of infertility should not be an issue for the selection of patients for extended embryo culture programmes, even when azoospermic patients are considered.
Written by:
Braga DP, Setti AS, Vingris L, Figueira RC, Iaconelli A, Borges E. Are you the author?
Fertility - Centro de Fertilização Assistida, São Paulo, Brazil; Instituto Sapientiae - Centro de Estudos e Pesquisa em Reprodução Humana Assistida, São Paulo, Brazil.
Reference: Andrology. 2013 Jul 10. Epub ahead of print.
doi: 10.1111/j.2047-2927.2013.00112.x
PubMed Abstract
PMID: 23843259
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