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Spermatogenesis affects the outcome of ICSI for azoospermic patients rather than sperm retrieval method
Authors:He Xiaojin  Cao Yunxia  Zhang Zhiguo  Zhao Jihua  Wei Zhaolian  Zhou Ping  Cong Lin
Affiliation:Reproductive Medicine Center, Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, The First Affiliated Hospital of Anhui Medical University, Hefei, China.
Abstract:The study investigated the clinical outcome of intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI) with epididymal and testicular sperm of azoospermic patients exhibiting various disturbances in spermatogenesis, in order to understand the possible factors that might affect ICSI outcome. Of the 134 patients, 92 were diagnosed as being obstructive azoospermic (OA group) with normal spermatogenesis and the remaining 42 patients were diagnosed as being non-obstructive azoospermic (NOA group) with hypospermatogenesis. The 92 OA patients underwent 112 ICSI cycles, which were divided into two subgroups according to their sperm retrieval methods: 1) OA-PESA group (n=51) with sperm obtained by percutaneous sperm aspiration (PESA) cycles and 2) OA-TEFNA group (n=61) with sperm obtained by testicular fine needle sperm aspiration (TEFNA) cycles. The NOA patients diagnosed with hypospermatogenesis according to histopathological analysis and hormone analysis, underwent 42 ICSI cycles with TEFNA. The results showed that the fertilization, cleavage, and clinical pregnancy rates portrayed a significant difference (44.9% vs. 64.1%, P<0.001, 79.8% vs. 89.0%, P<0.001, and 21.4% vs. 40.2%, P=0.047, respectively) between NOA and OA groups. Moreover, the miscarriage rate in the NOA group was visibly higher even though it did not reach a statistical difference (33.3% vs. 15.6%, P=0.433) compared with the miscarriage rate of the OA group. The same statistical differences were observed between the subgroup OA-TEFNA and the NOA group. No statistical difference was observed between OA-PESA and OA-TEFNA groups for the fertilization, cleavage, clinical pregnancy, and miscarriage rates. This study indicates that defective spermatogenesis affects the ICSI clinical outcome of azoospermic patients rather than the sperm retrieval methods.
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