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In order to reach fertilization in the context of IVF, the presence of high concentrations of spermatozoa is associated with a higher degree of sperm metabolism and a higher concentration of sperm degradation products, which may adversely affect not only sperm and oocyte viability and the fertilization rate. The effect of a high concentration of sperm used for oocyte insemination appears also to be negative on embryo development (Dumoulin et al 1992*). If that is true, lowering the sperm concentration for oocyte insemination might improve embryo quality and result in a higher implantation rate per embryo. Therefore, we tested the hypothesis that the percentage of 8 cell-embryos on day 3 after IVF is significantly higher (40%) after insemination with a low sperm concentration (150 000/ml spermatozoa) than after insemination with a higher sperm concentration (30%; group 600 000/ml spermatozoa).
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BACKGROUND
In human in-vitro fertilization procedures, oocytes are usually inseminated with concentrations that vary between 50 000 and 150 000 spermatozoa per ml fertilization medium. It has been shown that increasing the concentration of spermatozoa to >200 000 per ml, results in decreased fertilisation rates (66,7% in the group inseminated with 200 000 spermatozoa/ml versus 79,7% in the group inseminated with 10 000-90 000/ml; p<0,001) (Mahadevan and Trounson, 1984). These results were confirmed by another study (Diamond, Rogers et al., 1985). The reason for this decreased fertilisation rate is unclear but it has been speculated that the presence of high concentrations of sperm metabolism or degradation products associated with larger numbers of spermatozoa may adversely affect sperm and oocyte viability. Dumoulin et al. 1992 showed that increasing the sperm concentration affects not only the fertilisation rate but also the embryo development (Dumoulin, Bras et al., 1992). Significantly fewer fast-developing embryos (4-cell and 5- to 8-cell stages) were found on day 2 in the 100 000/ml group (53.4%) than in the 50 000/ml group (65.5%; p<0.05).
At the Leuven University Fertility Centre (LUFC) oocytes have been inseminated traditionally for more than 15 years now with a higher sperm concentration (600 000/ml spermatozoa) than the average concentrations published (50 000 to 200 000 motile sperm/ml) (Chen and Kattera, 2006; Dumoulin, Bras et al., 1992; Racowsky, Combelles et al., 2003) This higher concentration for the insemination may be the cause of the lower rate of 8-cell embryos on day 3 observed at the LUFC when compared to the literature. At the LUFC only 20% of the embryos reach the 8-cell stage on day 3. In the literature the proportion of 8 cell embryos on Day 3 has been reported to be between 30 and 37% (Chen and Kattera, 2006;Racowsky, Combelles et al., 2003;Racowsky, Orasanu et al., 2005).
In this prospective randomised trial we will test the hypothesis that embryo development can be improved by reducing the sperm concentration at insemination. This will be the first randomised trial showing the effect of inseminating with 600 000 spermatozoa/ml on the embryo development on day 3.
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82 participants in 2 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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