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230 : The Effectiveness of Spermatid Injection (ROSI, ELSI) Versus Spermatozoa Injection (ICSI) in Infertility Treatment for Men with Non-Obstructive Azoospermia (NOA)
Background and Aims: About 1% of men suffer from azoospermia, a condition of having no sperm in the ejaculate. Non-obstructive azoospermia, which affects 60% of azoospermia patients, is the most severe form of male infertility and requires testicular sperm extraction for sperm retrieval. Despite a 50% success rate, if no mature sperm is found, NOA men have no choice become biological fathers. To overcome this, researchers have attempted to use spermatid injection techniques, such as round spermatid injection (ROSI) or elongating/elongated spermatid injection (ELSI), to give hope for pregnancy. Spermatids are immature sperm but contain a haploid genome as spermatozoa.
The aim of this prospective cohort study was to evaluate the effectiveness of ROSI and ELSI in cases where spermatozoa were unavailable.
Method: Ninety-nine men diagnosed with NOA were recruited for the study. When the male partners lack spermatozoa in the testicular biopsy but have normal good-looking spermatids, they are consulted to join in the research. The intervention group received ROSI and ELSI, while the control group received spermatozoa injection into oocytes (ICSI).
The primary outcome measures were fertilization, embryo development, clinical pregnancy, and live birth rate.
Results: The overall fertilization rate (2PN) per MII oocyte injected after ROSI was low at 31.0% compared to ELSI and ICSI at 67.7% and 77.2%, respectively. The pregnancy rate after ROSI was also low, with 3.3% per transferred cycle and 2.2% per embryo transferred. The pregnancy rate of ROSI was much lower than ELSI (42.9%) and ICSI (55.6%). Normal pregnancy and live birth resulted in three groups (Table 1).
Conclusion: ROSI and ELSI can be considered alternative methods of infertility treatment in cases where spermatozoa are unavailable.