Abstract

To determine if the overcoming of the cervical mucus barrier removes the interference of sperm-bound antibodies with fertility. Prospective case series. University-based intrauterine insemination (IUI) homologous program. Nineteen patients with all spermatozoa in the ejaculate coated by antisperm antibodies. As control group, 86 consecutive patients without antisperm antibodies, treated for oligoasthenozoospermia or mucus hostility. Intrauterine inseminations (at least 3 attempts per couple). The outcome of IUIs, demographic, and seminal parameters were compared between the two groups. No pregnancy occurred in the couples with male immunological infertility, treated by 110 IUIs. Twenty-three pregnancies occurred in 22 (25.6%) of the control group couples who were treated by 411 IUIs. In the group of patients without antisperm antibodies, we demonstrated that the pregnancy rate (PR)/couple in oligoasthenozoospermia without teratozoospermia was similar to that achieved in normozoospermia (35% versus 38.9%), whereas it was significantly affected by teratozoospermia (3.6%). Only three patients with antisperm antibodies had teratozoospermia. Comparing the PR per couple and per cycle between the two groups of patients (with and without antisperm antibodies), excluding the patients with teratozoospermia, significant differences resulted (P less than 0.005 and P less than 0.005, respectively). The motile sperm count was not significantly different between the two groups, which also resulted to be homogeneous for demographic data. Moreover, the motile sperm count was not different between the patients with and without antisperm antibodies, who had successful IUI. The analysis of this trial suggests that the failure of IUI in the treatment of male immunological infertility is imputable to antisperm antibodies when they involve all spermatozoa, regardless of semen quality.

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