Back to Search Start Over

Female age affects the utility of sperm DNA fragmentation in predicting IVF and ICSI outcomes

Authors :
Yifang Mao
Shan Liu
Liang Xiaolei
Jiexi Yan
Yiqing Wang
Source :
Reproductive biomedicine online. 39(6)
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Research question The aim of this study was to investigate how female age affects the predictive effect of sperm DNA fragmentation index (DFI) on clinical outcomes with assisted reproductive technology. Design A total of 2371 patients, comprising 2115 men with a normal DFI (≤30), 256 men with a high DFI (>30) and women of different ages, were recruited and investigated. All patients had normal chromosome karyotypes and were undergoing their first fresh IVF or intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI) cycles. Clinical outcomes were analysed according to the two DFI groups and female age ≤30 and >30 years. Binary logistic regression analysis was performed to identify factors associated with clinical outcome. Results The proportion of couples with at least one good-quality embryo in the DFI ≤30 group was higher than that in the DFI >30 group. When female age exceeded 30 years, clinical pregnancy rate and the proportion of couples with good-quality embryos in the DFI >30 group were lower compared with DFI ≤30; however, there were no differences in outcomes for female age ≤30 years according to DFI. When DFI >30, the cut-off value of female age was 30.5 for detecting clinical pregnancy; the sensitivity was 62.0%, and the specificity was 63.6%. Clinical pregnancy rate and proportion of couples with good-quality embryos were lower in the DFI >30 versus DFI ≤30 group with a female age above 30 years for IVF but not for ICSI. Conclusion Female age has a negative effect and should be considered in predicting the effects of sperm DNA fragmentation on pregnancy outcomes.

Details

ISSN :
14726491
Volume :
39
Issue :
6
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Reproductive biomedicine online
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....bd6aff448bb1f31e3501519b7971a0a8