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Human Fertility
an international, multidisciplinary journal dedicated to furthering research and promoting good practice
Volume 25, 2022 - Issue 2
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Articles

Seminal protein levels assessed with dipstick test correlate with sperm recovery after cryopreservation

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Pages 349-355 | Received 12 Feb 2020, Accepted 19 May 2020, Published online: 25 Jul 2020
 

Abstract

The process of freezing/thawing causes structural and functional damage to sperm samples, which can be mitigated by seminal plasma proteins. This study investigated the proposition that seminal protein measurements using a urinary dipstick prior to freezing could help predict the post-thaw recovery of live spermatozoa. This was a prospective study including 149 men undergoing semen analysis due to male and/or female infertility. The seminal samples were analysed according to World Health Organisation standards and protein concentrations were measured using a commercially available urinary dipstick following quantitative validation. The median live sperm recovery rates were 79%, 81% and 94%, respectively, in samples with protein concentrations of ≤1.0 g/L (+/++), 3.0 g/L (+++) and ≥20.0 g/L (++++) measured in fresh specimen dipstick analysis (p < 0.05) indicating that the probability of recovering at least 50% of frozen spermatozoa increased progressively with higher protein concentrations in the fresh sample (chi-square for linear association = 7.17. p = 0.007). In conclusion, fresh seminal protein concentration levels assessed with a dipstick test correlate with the proportion of live spermatozoa recovered from cryopreserved samples. This simple, low-cost test may add prognostic information to baseline semen analysis prior to sperm banking.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).

Additional information

Funding

Research supported by Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico [CNPq, grant # 311154/2015-8].

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