Patients with spermatogenic dysfunction may display sperm parameters ranging from extremely severe oligozoospermia (sperm count lower than 2 million/ml) to azoospermia. It has been proposed that, since these patients may have increased sperm DNA damage that could affect their ICSI outcome, the use of surgically retrieved testicular spermatozoa should be preferred to improve their chance of fathering their biological offspring. However, studies in this field have yielded conflicting results. The present study provides an updated assessment of this subject by comparing the ICSI outcome of 762 patients with nonobstructive azoospermia and 419 with sperm count lower than 2 million/ml (median sperm count 300,000/ml). Both groups were homogeneous for the number of retrieved and injected MII oocytes. No difference was seen in terms of fertilisation, clinical pregnancy and cumulative live birth rates. Only the number of injected MII oocytes was found to independently predict the live birth rate, even when adjusted for the number of transferred embryos (OR 1.10 (1.0-1.2, p = 0.038)). The results of the present study stand against the use of testicular spermatozoa in patients with extremely severe spermatogenic dysfunction with available spermatozoa in their ejaculate.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/and.13884DOI Listing

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