Sperm morphology as diagnosed by strict criteria: probing the impact of teratozoospermia on fertilization rate and pregnancy outcome in a large in vitro fertilization population.
OBJECTIVE: To investigate the predictive value of sperm morphology assessed by strict criteria on IVF outcome. DESIGN: Retrospective analysis of all IVF cycles (January 1987 to December 1992). MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: All patients were assigned to one of three groups based on sperm morphology: P-pattern (< 4% normal forms), G-pattern (4% to 14% normal forms), and N-pattern (> 14% normal forms). Morphology pattern was related to other semen characteristics and IVF outcome. RESULTS: Despite corrective measures at oocyte insemination, the fertilization rate was significantly different among the three morphology groups, P < G < N. N-pattern sperm produced a mean fertilization rate over 85% regardless of low motility or concentration. In a cohort study, P-pattern cycles produced a lower implantation rate and lower ongoing pregnancy rate, independent of the lower fertilization rate. CONCLUSIONS: Strict morphology is an excellent biomarker of sperm fertilizing capacity, independent of motility and concentration. P-pattern sperm may denote a poorer prognosis for establishing a pregnancy, even after a satisfactory fertilization rate is achieved.
Duke Scholars
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Related Subject Headings
- Spermatozoa
- Sperm Motility
- Retrospective Studies
- Regression Analysis
- Pregnancy Outcome
- Pregnancy
- Predictive Value of Tests
- Obstetrics & Reproductive Medicine
- Male
- Humans
Citation
Published In
DOI
ISSN
Publication Date
Volume
Issue
Start / End Page
Location
Related Subject Headings
- Spermatozoa
- Sperm Motility
- Retrospective Studies
- Regression Analysis
- Pregnancy Outcome
- Pregnancy
- Predictive Value of Tests
- Obstetrics & Reproductive Medicine
- Male
- Humans