In cases requiring microsurgical epididymal sperm aspiration (MESA) for congenital absence of the vas deferens (CAVD) or irreparable obstructive azoospermia, often no spermatozoa can be retrieved from the epididymis, or there may even be no epididymis present. We wished to see whether testicular biopsy with testicular sperm extraction (TESE) in such cases could yield spermatozoa that would result in successful fertilization and pregnancy (despite the absence of epididymal spermatozoa) using intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI). In the same setting during the same 2-week period, 28 patients with CAVD or irreparable obstruction were treated; 16 consecutive fresh MESA-ICSI cycles and 12 cycles which required testicular biopsy with testicular sperm extraction (TESE-ICSI) were performed. Normal two-pronuclear fertilization rates were similar in both groups: 45% for epididymal spermatozoa and 46% for testicular biopsy-extracted spermatozoa. Cleavage rates were also similar (68% for epididymal and 65% for testicular spermatozoa). The ongoing pregnancy rates in this series were 50 and 43% respectively. We conclude that epididymal spermatozoa and testicular spermatozoa yield similar fertilization, cleavage and ongoing pregnancy rates using ICSI. When epididymal spermatozoa cannot be retrieved, a testicular biopsy can be performed and the few barely motile spermatozoa thus obtained can be used for ICSI. It appears that all cases of obstructive azoospermia can now be successfully treated.
Recovery of testicular spermatozoa from azoospermic patients with testicular failure, followed by intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI) is a recent advance in the treatment of male infertility. In most cases, free spermatozoa are recovered from testicular tissue after mechanical mincing of multiple biopsies. Testicular sperm retrieval, however, remains unsuccessful in 30-50% of male patients suffering from Sertoli cell-only syndrome and maturation arrest. In this study, a strategy was developed in order to maximize the chance of sperm retrieval in difficult cases of testicular failure. The ultimate step was the use of enzymatic procedures (collagenase type IV) to dissociate the testicular tissue completely. Testicular tissue of 41 patients for whom no spermatozoa were found after mechanical mincing of the testicular tissue was investigated. In 14 out of the 41 cases (34%), enough spermatozoa for ICSI were found after fine mincing of multiple biopsies and several hours' search in the cell suspension treated with the erythrocyte-lysing buffer (ELB). In 27 out of the 41 patients, no spermatozoa were found even after the use of ELB. In seven out of these 27 failures (26%), spermatozoa for ICSI were retrieved after enzymatic dissociation of the residual minced tissue pieces, thus making ICSI possible despite failure to find spermatozoa with conventional mincing. From this study, we may conclude that enzymatic digestion of testicular tissue is easy to perform, is not time-consuming and constitutes a successful method in reducing the sperm recovery failures in patients with non-obstructive azoospermia.
For men with uncorrectable obstructive azoospermia, their only hope of fathering a child is microsurgical epididymal sperm aspiration (MESA) combined with in vitro fertilization (IVF). In 1988, proximal epididymal sperm were demonstrated to have better motility than senescent sperm in the distal epididymis, and it was thought that retrieval of motile sperm from the proximal epididymis would yield reliable fertilization and pregnancy rates after conventional IVF. However, the results to date have been poor, and although a minority of patients achieved good fertilization rates with IVF, the vast majority (81%) had consistently poor or no fertilization and the pregnancy rate averaged only 9%. Recently, intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI) has been successfully used to achieve fertilization and pregnancies for patients with extreme oligoasthenozoospermia. ICSI has therefore been applied to cases of obstructive azoospermia and, in this report, 67 MESA-IVF cases are compared with 72 MESA-ICSI cases. The principle that motile sperm from the proximal segments of the epididymis should be used for ICSI was followed, although in the most severe cases in which there was an absence of the epididymis (or absence of sperm in the epididymis), testicular sperm were obtained from macerated testicular biopsies. These sperm only exhibited a weak, twitching motion. In 72 consecutive MESA cases, ICSI resulted in fertilization and normal embryos for transfer in 90% of the cases, with an overall fertilization rate of 46%, a cleavage rate of 68%, and ongoing or delivered pregnancy rates of 46% per transfer and 42% per cycle. The pregnancy and take-home baby rates increased from 9% and 4.5% with IVF to 53% and 42% with ICSI. There were no differences between the results for fresh epididymal, frozen epididymal or testicular sperm, and the number of eggs collected did not affect the outcome. The results were also unaffected by the aetiology of the obstruction such as congenital absence of the vas deferens or failed vasoepididymostomy. The only significant factor which affected the pregnancy rate was female age. It is concluded that although complex mechanisms involving epididymal transport may be beneficial for conventional fertilization of human oocytes (in vivo or in vitro), none of these mechanisms are required for fertilization after ICSI. Given the excellent results with epididymal and testicular sperm, ICSI is obligatory for all future MESA patients. Finally, the use of ICSI with testicular sperm from men with non-obstructive azoospermia is also discussed.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.