Semen Cryopreservation for Men Banking for Oligozoospermia, Cancers, and Other Conditions: 24 Years’ Experience of an Italian Bank

Author:

Marchiani Sara1ORCID,Degl’Innocenti Selene2,Dabizzi Sara2ORCID,Tamburrino Lara2,Fino Maria Grazia2,Traini Giulia1,Calamai Costanza1,Maggi Mario1ORCID,Vignozzi Linda12ORCID,Baldi Elisabetta23,Lotti Francesco12

Affiliation:

1. Department of Experimental and Clinical Biomedical Sciences “Mario Serio”, University of Florence, 50134 Florence, Italy

2. Andrology, Women’s Endocrinology and Gender Incongruence Unit, Center for Prevention, Diagnosis and Treatment of Infertility, Careggi University Hospital, 50139 Florence, Italy

3. Department of Experimental and Clinical Medicine, University of Florence, 50134 Florence, Italy

Abstract

Background: Sperm cryopreservation is recommended to preserve male fertility for cancer patients or other medical conditions at risk of sperm decline. Whether motility and viability recovery rates vary depending on the medical conditions requiring cryopreservation is poorly known. We report here on the 24-year experience of our semen bank. Methods: Motility and viability recovery rates were evaluated in 1973 collections from patients with various medical conditions and 67 collections from donors, and the results were related to basal semen quality. Results: Motility and viability recovery were highly related to basal semen quality and varied between cancer and non-cancer conditions, independently of the duration of cryopreservation and patient age. In samples with a sperm number below 2 × 106/mL, recovery rates approximated to zero. The highest recovery rates were found in donor collections. Cut-off values for the recovery of at least 1% motile spermatozoa were established based on initial semen quality. Conclusions: Our results indicate that the occurrence of any pathological or medical condition resulted in lower recovery rates with respect to donors, indicating that intrinsic sperm characteristics drive susceptibility to cryodamage. Established cut-off values for motility recovery can be useful for patient counseling as well as for ART laboratories to decide the type of procedure.

Funder

University of Florence

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

General Medicine

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