Abstract

This study aimed to determine whether fertilization and implantation rates after intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI) with fresh or frozen-thawed testicular spermatozoa were comparable. Between 1 January 1996 and 31 December 1996, 65 ICSI cycles with testicular spermatozoa and 35 cycles with frozen-thawed testicular spermatozoa were carried out. In 50 out of 65 ICSI cycles, testicular spermatozoa could be retrieved and in 34 out of 35 cycles carried out with frozen-thawed testicular spermatozoa, motile spermatozoa could be recovered. The fertilization rate after ICSI with frozen-thawed testicular spermatozoa was significantly lower (71.1%; P < or = 0.008) than with fresh testicular spermatozoa (79.3%). The pregnancy rate was similar for both groups (38.2 and 26.5 %). The implantation rate per transferred embryo, however, was significantly lower in the frozen-thawed rather than in the fresh testicular sperm group (9.1 versus 24.6%; P = 0.001). The live birth rate per transferred embryo was also higher in the group in which fresh testicular spermatozoa were used (18.8 versus 7.9% P = 0.043). This retrospective study shows that is possible to achieve a high fertilization rate after ICSI with both fresh and frozen-thawed testicular spermatozoa but implantation and live birth rates per transferred embryo, however, are significantly lower after ICSI with frozen-thawed than with fresh testicular spermatozoa.

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