1. Reproductive Outcomes in Infertile Men With Spinal Cord Injury (SCI): A Retrospective Case-Control Analysis
- Author
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Maria Elisabetta Coccia, Alessandro Natali, Marco Carini, Andrea Minervini, Giulio Del Popolo, G Lombardi, Gianmartin Cito, Andrea Cocci, Rossella Fucci, Rita Picone, and Luca Gemma
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Sperm Retrieval ,Pregnancy Rate ,Urology ,medicine.medical_treatment ,030232 urology & nephrology ,Fertilization in Vitro ,Reproductive technology ,Semen analysis ,Electroejaculation ,Intracytoplasmic sperm injection ,Male infertility ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Pregnancy ,medicine ,Humans ,Ejaculation ,Sperm Injections, Intracytoplasmic ,Infertility, Male ,Spinal Cord Injuries ,Retrospective Studies ,Gynecology ,In vitro fertilisation ,Sperm Count ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Pregnancy Outcome ,medicine.disease ,Sperm ,Semen Analysis ,Italy ,Case-Control Studies ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Sperm Motility ,Female ,business - Abstract
To evaluate semen characteristics and reproductive outcomes after assisted ejaculation methods with fresh in vitro fertilization/intracytoplasmic sperm injection cycles in patients suffering from spinal cord injury (SCI), compared to controls, affected by idiopathic male infertility (non-SCI group).SCI patients first underwent penile vibratory stimulation. Men "non-responders" to penile vibratory stimulation underwent electroejaculation. Third, testicular sperm aspiration was proposed.This retrospective monocenter case-control study included 193 couples: 53 couples in SCI group and 140 couples in non-SCI group. Overall, 210 fresh in vitro fertilization/intracytoplasmic sperm injection cycles were performed. Median semen volume of SCI was significantly lower, compared to non-SCI (1.5 mL vs 3.1 mL; P.01). Median sperm concentration/mL and total sperm count was considerably higher in SCI. Mean sperm progressive motility was significantly lower in SCI (5.0% vs 35.0%; P.01). Normal fertilization rate was significantly lower in SCI (46.0% vs 71.0%; P.01). Total fertilization rate was 50.0% and 75%, respectively, in SCI and non-SCI groups. A trend toward higher pregnancy rates per cycle was found in non-SCI (31.4% vs 21.4%), or in the live birth rate, which was 27.1% and 20.0%, respectively. No significant differences were found in pregnancy, miscarriage, and live birth rates per cycle, between the 2 groups.The assisted ejaculation methods in SCI proved to be efficacious and safe to obtain viable sperm for assisted reproductive technologies. Overall, pregnancy and live birth rates were similar to non-SCI patients. Thus, SCI men have the same opportunity to father biological children, compared to men without SCI.
- Published
- 2020
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