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Review |

,
From the * Division of Urology, Department of
Surgery, McGill University, Montreal, Quebec, Canada; and the
Division of Urology, Department of Surgery,
Brown University, Providence, Rhode Island.
| Correspondence to: Dr Armand Zini, St Mary's Hospital, 3830 Lacombe Ave, Room 2304, Montreal, Quebec, Canada H3T 1M5 (e-mail: ziniarmand{at}yahoo.com). |
The advent of assisted reproductive technologies, particularly
intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI), has revolutionized the treatment of
male-factor infertility. However, there are many unanswered questions
regarding the safety of these techniques. These safety concerns are relevant
because 1) these technologies often bypass the barriers to natural selection;
2) infertile men, particularly those with severe male-factor infertility,
possess substantially more sperm DNA damage than do fertile men; and 3)
experimentally, sperm DNA damage has been shown to adversely affect the
developing embryo. This review discusses the etiology of sperm DNA damage,
describes the individual tests of sperm DNA damage, and explores the
relationship between sperm DNA damage and pregnancy outcomes. Based on a
systematic review of the literature, sperm DNA damage is associated with lower
natural, intrauterine insemination (IUI), and in vitro fertilization (IVF)
pregnancy rates, but not with ICSI pregnancy rates. The literature also
suggests that that sperm DNA damage is associated with an increased risk of
pregnancy loss in those couples undergoing IVF or ICSI. Nonetheless, the true
clinical utility of sperm DNA damage tests remains to be established, because
the available studies are small and few in number and the study
characteristics are heterogeneous. Although current data suggest that impaired
sperm DNA integrity may have the greatest effect on IUI pregnancy rates and
pregnancy loss by IVF and ICSI, further prospective studies are needed before
testing should become a routine part of patient management.
Key words: Fertility, ICSI, IVF, DNA integrity, meta-analysis
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