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Selecting sperm for ICSI - IMSI Allan Pacey University of Sheffield Sheffield Teaching Hospitals
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Selecting sperm for ICSI - IMSI Allan Pacey University of Sheffield Sheffield Teaching Hospitals.

Jan 02, 2016

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Page 1: Selecting sperm for ICSI - IMSI Allan Pacey University of Sheffield Sheffield Teaching Hospitals.

Selecting sperm for ICSI - IMSI

Allan PaceyUniversity of Sheffield

Sheffield Teaching Hospitals

Page 2: Selecting sperm for ICSI - IMSI Allan Pacey University of Sheffield Sheffield Teaching Hospitals.

[email protected]://www.twitter.com/allanpacey

Page 3: Selecting sperm for ICSI - IMSI Allan Pacey University of Sheffield Sheffield Teaching Hospitals.

Intra Cytoplasmic Sperm Injection

Palermo et al., (1992) Lancet 340: 17-18

Page 4: Selecting sperm for ICSI - IMSI Allan Pacey University of Sheffield Sheffield Teaching Hospitals.

What does ICSI bypass?

Suarez and Pacey (2006) Human Reprod Update 12: 23-37

Page 5: Selecting sperm for ICSI - IMSI Allan Pacey University of Sheffield Sheffield Teaching Hospitals.

Sperm Transport

Suarez and Pacey (2006) Human Reprod Update 12: 23-37

Cervix

Utero-tubal junction

Sperm-epithelial interactions

Sperm-oocyte interaction

Page 6: Selecting sperm for ICSI - IMSI Allan Pacey University of Sheffield Sheffield Teaching Hospitals.

Summary of sperm functionsin relation to mode of conception

Mode of fertilisation / conception

coitus IC IUI GIFT IVF ICSI

Passage through cervical mucus Y N N N N N

Transport through the uterus Y Y N N N N

Passage through the UTJ Y Y Y N N N

Sperm-epithelial interaction Y Y Y ? N N

Capacitation Y Y Y Y Y N

Sperm Egg Binding Y Y Y Y Y N

Passage through zona pellucida Y Y Y Y Y N

Decondensation of sperm DNA Y Y Y Y Y Y

Pacey (2005) What Makes ‘Good Sperm’? In Implantation and Early Development. RCOG Press. pp. 119 - 128.

Page 7: Selecting sperm for ICSI - IMSI Allan Pacey University of Sheffield Sheffield Teaching Hospitals.

Pacey (2005) What Makes ‘Good Sperm’? In Implantation and Early Development. RCOG Press. pp. 119 - 128.

Summary of sperm functionsin relation to mode of conception

Mode of fertilisation / conception

coitus IC IUI GIFT IVF ICSI

Passage through cervical mucus Y N N N N N

Transport through the uterus Y Y N N N N

Passage through the UTJ Y Y Y N N N

Sperm-epithelial interaction Y Y Y ? N N

Capacitation Y Y Y Y Y N

Sperm Egg Binding Y Y Y Y Y N

Passage through zona pellucida Y Y Y Y Y N

Decondensation of sperm DNA Y Y Y Y Y Y

Page 8: Selecting sperm for ICSI - IMSI Allan Pacey University of Sheffield Sheffield Teaching Hospitals.

DNA Quality

% FAS positive cells

Lewis & Simon (2010) Human Fertility 13: 201-217

Page 9: Selecting sperm for ICSI - IMSI Allan Pacey University of Sheffield Sheffield Teaching Hospitals.

Nagy et al., (1995) Human Reproduction 10: 1123-1129

ICSI and semen parameters

Page 10: Selecting sperm for ICSI - IMSI Allan Pacey University of Sheffield Sheffield Teaching Hospitals.

Motile Sperm Organelle Morphology Examination (MSOME)

Bartoov et al., (2002) Journal of Andrology 23: 1-8

Page 11: Selecting sperm for ICSI - IMSI Allan Pacey University of Sheffield Sheffield Teaching Hospitals.

Motile Sperm Organelle Morphology Examination (MSOME)

Bartoov et al., (2002) Journal of Andrology 23: 1-8

Page 12: Selecting sperm for ICSI - IMSI Allan Pacey University of Sheffield Sheffield Teaching Hospitals.

Motile Sperm Organelle Morphology Examination (MSOME)

Bartoov et al., (2003) Fertility and Sterility 80: 1413-1419

Page 13: Selecting sperm for ICSI - IMSI Allan Pacey University of Sheffield Sheffield Teaching Hospitals.

Antinori et al., (2008) RBM Online 16: 835-841

Prospective RCT (IMSI)

Page 14: Selecting sperm for ICSI - IMSI Allan Pacey University of Sheffield Sheffield Teaching Hospitals.

Antinori et al., (2008) RBM Online 16: 835-841

ICSI(n=219)

IMSI(n=227)

Mean age (years) 31.91 ±3.30 31.65 ± 3.23

No of previous ICSI failures 1.45 ±1.57 1.46 ± 1.69

No of MII oocytes recovered 6.29 ± 3.04 6.58 ± 3.34

No of injected oocytes 2.92 ± 0.26 2.90 ± 0.29

No of 2PN zygotes 2.76 ± 0.42 2.75 ± 0.45

No of transferred embryos/patient 2.37 ± 0.67 2.47 ± 0.68

Clinical pregnancy rate (%) 58/219 (26.5%) 89/227 (39.2%)

Implantation rate (%) 59/521 (11.3%) 97/560 (17.3%)

Miscarriage rate (%) 14/58 (24.1%) 15/89 (16.9%)

Prospective RCT (IMSI)

Page 15: Selecting sperm for ICSI - IMSI Allan Pacey University of Sheffield Sheffield Teaching Hospitals.

Antinori et al., (2008) RBM Online 16: 835-841

Prospective RCT (IMSI)

ICSI(n=219)

IMSI(n=227)

Mean age (years) 31.91 ±3.30 31.65 ± 3.23

No of previous ICSI failures 1.45 ±1.57 1.46 ± 1.69

No of MII oocytes recovered 6.29 ± 3.04 6.58 ± 3.34

No of injected oocytes 2.92 ± 0.26 2.90 ± 0.29

No of 2PN zygotes 2.76 ± 0.42 2.75 ± 0.45

No of transferred embryos/patient 2.37 ± 0.67 2.47 ± 0.68

Clinical pregnancy rate (%) 58/219 (26.5%) 89/227 (39.2%)

Implantation rate (%) 59/521 (11.3%) 97/560 (17.3%)

Miscarriage rate (%) 14/58 (24.1%) 15/89 (16.9%)

Page 16: Selecting sperm for ICSI - IMSI Allan Pacey University of Sheffield Sheffield Teaching Hospitals.

How is IMSI done?• Sperm obtained and

prepared

• Observed using Nomarski differential interference contrast optics

• Images captures on a video camera and projected on a monitor

• Total magnification = x6,600

• Each cell observed individually by a second embryologist

Antinori et al., (2008) RBM Online 16: 835-841

Page 17: Selecting sperm for ICSI - IMSI Allan Pacey University of Sheffield Sheffield Teaching Hospitals.

What do sperm vacuoles represent ?

Sperm from infertile men have a higher incidence of:

•DNA Fragmentation

•Errors of chromatin packaging

•Aneuploidy

Therefore, does the appearance of sperm vacuoles represent a non-invasive way of detecting one or more of these.

Page 18: Selecting sperm for ICSI - IMSI Allan Pacey University of Sheffield Sheffield Teaching Hospitals.

Sperm DNA fragmentation (TUNEL) #1

Oliveria et al., (2010) Fertility and Sterility 94: 1937-1940

Page 19: Selecting sperm for ICSI - IMSI Allan Pacey University of Sheffield Sheffield Teaching Hospitals.

Watanabe et al., (2011) Human Reproduction (in press)

Sperm DNA fragmentation (TUNEL) #2

Page 20: Selecting sperm for ICSI - IMSI Allan Pacey University of Sheffield Sheffield Teaching Hospitals.

Franco et al., (2011) Int Journal of Andrology (in press)

Sperm chromatin packaging

Normal Sperm Sperm with vacuoles

Positive staining 337 719

Negative Staining 498 632

Page 21: Selecting sperm for ICSI - IMSI Allan Pacey University of Sheffield Sheffield Teaching Hospitals.

Cássia et al., (2011) Fertility and Sterility 95: 990-993

Sperm and embryo aneuploidy

Characteristic ICSI(n=60)

IMSI(n=60)

P value

Female age (years) 38.1 ± 5.4 37.3 ± 3.2 0.5866

Male age (years) 42.6 ± 8.0 43.6 ± 8.9 0.7330

Total gonadotrophin dose (IU) 2,601 ± 676 2,697 ± 659

0.6592

Total aspirated follicles 13.2 ± 8.2 17.3 ± 10.7

0.0976

Total retrieved oocytes 8.6 ± 5.2 12.9 ± 9.7 0.1705

Sperm concentration (x106/ml) 22.2 ± 5.3 21.8 ± 6.7 0.7954

Sperm progressive motility (%)

35.6 34.8 0.6823

Fertilisation rate (%) 84.3 76.7 0.0638

Embryos 1.1 ± 1.0 1.7 ± 1.0 0.1705

Page 22: Selecting sperm for ICSI - IMSI Allan Pacey University of Sheffield Sheffield Teaching Hospitals.

• IMSI was associated with lower risk of:

Sex chromosome abnormality (OR 0.57; CI 0.37-0.90) Chaotic embryo development (OR 0.64; CI 0.43-0.96)

• Sex chromosome aneuploidy was higher in ICSI embryos compared to IMSI embryos (23.5% vs 15.0%; P=0.920)

• Unexpected higher incidence of euploid XX embryos derived from IMSI cycles compared to ICSI (30.0% vs 21.6%; P=0.0326)

Sperm and embryo aneuploidy

Cássia et al., (2011) Fertility and Sterility 95: 990-993

Page 23: Selecting sperm for ICSI - IMSI Allan Pacey University of Sheffield Sheffield Teaching Hospitals.

So what do more recent trials say?

Oliveria et al., (2011) Reprod Biol and Endocrinol 9:99

Characteristic ICSI(n=100)

IMSI(n=100)

P value

Female age (years) 36.7 ± 4.0 36.7 ± 4.0 P=0.80

Male age (years) 40.3 ± 6.0 39.8 ± 6.2 P=0.50

Total gonadotrophin dose (IU) - - -

Total aspirated follicles - - -

Total retrieved oocytes - - -

Sperm concentration (x106/ml) 70.7 ± 60.4 70.4 ± 83.4

0.97

Sperm progressive motility (%)

49.6 ± 23.7 51.8 ± 19.7

0.55

Fertilisation rate (%) 62.0 ±26.5 65.4 ±23.5 0.34

Embryos 2.7 ± 1.0 2.7 ± 1.0 0.44

Page 24: Selecting sperm for ICSI - IMSI Allan Pacey University of Sheffield Sheffield Teaching Hospitals.

So what do more recent trials say?

Oliveria et al., (2011) Reprod Biol and Endocrinol 9:99

Characteristic ICSI(n=100)

IMSI(n=100)

P value

Implantation rate (%) 9.8% 13.6% 0.21

Pregnancy / cycle (%) 19.0% 26.0% 0.73

Miscarriage rate (%) 31.6% 15.4% 0.28

Ongoing pregnancies/cycle (%)

13.0% 22.0% 0.13

Live birth/cycle (%) 12.0% 21.0% 0.12

Our results suggest that IMSI does not provide a significant improvement in clinical outcome compared to ICSI, at least in couples with repeated implantation failures after conventional ICSI. However, it should be noted that there were clear trends for lower miscarriage rates (approx 50% reduced) and higher rates of ongoing pregnancy and live births (both nearly doubled) within the IMSI group.

Page 25: Selecting sperm for ICSI - IMSI Allan Pacey University of Sheffield Sheffield Teaching Hospitals.

Meta Analysis

Souza et al., (2010) RBM Online 21: 450-455

• The meta-analysis results demonstrated no significant difference in fertilization rate between ICSI and IMSI groups.

• However, a significantly improved implantation (OR: 2.72; 95% CI: 1.50-4.95) and pregnancy rate (OR 3.12; 95% CI 1.55-6.26) was observed in IMSI cycles.

• The results showed a significantly decreased miscarriage rate (OR 0.42; 95% CI 0.23-0.78) in IMSI cycles as compared with ICSI cycles.

• However, more randomized controlled trials are needed to confirm these results.

Page 26: Selecting sperm for ICSI - IMSI Allan Pacey University of Sheffield Sheffield Teaching Hospitals.

Globozoospermia

Sermondade et al., (2011) Human Reproduction (in press)

Page 27: Selecting sperm for ICSI - IMSI Allan Pacey University of Sheffield Sheffield Teaching Hospitals.

• In theory IMSI offers some advantage to sperm selection because of the high magnifications involved (x6,000).

• A single meta-analysis shows that IMSI improves pregnancy rates and decreases miscarriage rates – we need more studies!

• The science is unclear with many unsubstantiated claims made about what ‘qualities of sperm’ are being selected for.

• A Health Economic Analysis is needed given the additional staff time involved in performing IMSI (e.g. two embryologists).

• Should only be offered to patients in the context of an appropriately controlled clinical trial.

Conclusions

Page 28: Selecting sperm for ICSI - IMSI Allan Pacey University of Sheffield Sheffield Teaching Hospitals.

[email protected]://www.twitter.com/allanpacey

ThankYou!