| Literature DB >> 31749341 |
Christopher Douglas1,2, Neel Parekh1,3, Linda G Kahn1,4, Ralf Henkel1,5, Ashok Agarwal6.
Abstract
Conventional semen analysis (SA) is an essential component of the male infertility workup, but requires laboratories to rigorously train and monitor technicians as well as regularly perform quality assurance assessments. Without such measures there is room for error and, consequently, unreliable results. Furthermore, clinicians often rely heavily on SA results when making diagnostic and treatment decisions, however conventional SA is only a surrogate marker of male fecundity and does not guarantee fertility. Considering these challenges, the last several decades have seen the development of many advances in SA methodology, including tests for sperm DNA fragmentation, acrosome reaction, and capacitation. While these new diagnostic tests have improved the scope of information available to clinicians, they are expensive, time-consuming, and require specialized training. The latest advance in laboratory diagnostics is the measurement of seminal oxidation-reduction potential (ORP). The measurement of ORP in an easy, reproducible manner using a new tool called the Male Infertility Oxidative Stress System (MiOXSYS) has demonstrated ORP's potential as a feasible adjunct test to conventional SA. Additionally, the measurement of ORP by this device has been shown to be predictive of both poor semen quality and male infertility. Assessing ORP is a novel approach to both validating manual SA results and identifying patients who may benefit from treatment of male oxidative stress infertility.Entities:
Keywords: Infertility, Male; MiOXSYS; Oxidation-reduction potential; Semen analysis; Semen analysis subjectivity
Year: 2019 PMID: 31749341 PMCID: PMC7994658 DOI: 10.5534/wjmh.190088
Source DB: PubMed Journal: World J Mens Health ISSN: 2287-4208 Impact factor: 5.400
Fig. 1Four ways in which error can influence the result gathered during semen analysis.
Fig. 2Ways ‘uncertainty of measurement’ can influence semen analysis.
Shifting of WHO threshold values for semen parameters per edition
| Semen parameter | WHO 1980 | WHO 1987 | WHO 1992 | WHO 1999 | WHO 2010 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Volume (mL) | ND | ≥2 | ≥2 | ≥2 | 1.5 |
| Sperm count (106/mL) | 20–200 | ≥20 | ≥20 | ≥20 | 15 |
| Total sperm count (106) | ND | ≥40 | ≥40 | ≥40 | 39 |
| Total motility (% motility) | ≥60 | ≥50 | ≥50 | ≥50 | 40 |
| Progressive motility (%) | ≥2 | ≥25 | ≥25 (grade a) | ≥25% (grade a) | 32 (grade a+b) |
| Vitality (% alive) | ND | ≥50 | ≥75 | ≥75 | 58 |
| Morphology (% normal forms) | 80.5 | ≥50 | ≥30 | 14 | 4 |
WHO: World Health Organization, ND: not defined.
Adapted from the article of Esteves et al (Urology 2012;79:16-22) [28] with original copyright holder's permission.
Intra-individual sample variation by semen parameter
| Semen parameter | Mean | Total coefficient of variability within-subject |
|---|---|---|
| Concentration (×106/mL) | 68.1 | 28.1 |
| Total motility (%) | 45.8 | 20.4 |
| Progressive motility (%) | 36.1 | 17.8 |
| Progressive rapid motility (%) | 17.8 | 22.8 |
| Morphology (% normal) | 12.7 | 20.9 |
| Vitality (%) | 62.4 | 12.4 |
Data extracted from the article Alvarez et al (Hum Reprod 2003;18:2082–8) [6].
Fig. 3Timeline of the advances made in analyzing semen samples. MiOXSYS: Male Infertility Oxidative System.
Fig. 4Correlation of oxidation-reduction potential (ORP) with sperm parameters. (A) Sperm Concentration. (B) Sperm count. (C) Motility. (D) Morphology. sORP: static ORP. Adapted from the article of Agarwal et al (Reprod Biomed Online 2017;34:48–57) [55] with original copyright holder's permission.
Fig. 5Distribution of oxidation-reduction potential (ORP) values in controls and patients with the established cut-off values. Results shown in box-plot showing median and the 25th, 75th percentile. The whiskers represent the 95% confidence intervals. sORP: static ORP. Adapted from the article of Agarwal et al (Reprod Biomed Online 2017;34:48–57) [55] with original copyright holder's permission.
Fig. 6Higher oxidation-reduction potential (ORP) values were measured in abnormal parameters. Shown: Semen with abnormally low numbers of spermatozoa had higher ORP values, semen with abnormally few motile spermatozoa was also related to higher ORP values and, semen with fewer morphologically normal spermatozoa had higher ORP values. *Significant at p<0.05. Adapted from the article of Arafa et al (Andrologia 2018;50) [56] with original copyright holder's permission.
Background information on the study population with a comparison of semen parameters between the normal and abnormal groups
| Semen parameter | Normal group (n=199) | Abnormal group (n=1893) | p-value |
|---|---|---|---|
| ORP (mV/106 sperm/mL) | 0.88±1.64 | 5.08±14.24 | 0.001 |
| Sperm total (×106) | 231.01±171.96 | 108.30±147.38 | 0.001 |
| Progressive motility (%) | 48.08±10.87 | 15.81±15.29 | 0.001 |
| Total motility (%) | 57.19±10.44 | 41.26±17.16 | 0.001 |
| Normal morphology (%) | 6.76±3.49 | 4.87±7.46 | 0.001 |
| Sperm concentration (×106/mL) | 70.53±50.82 | 34.72±31.16 | 0.001 |
| Volume (mL) | 3.47±1.41 | 3.18±2.29 | 0.001 |
Values are presented as mean±standard deviation or range. Sperm parameters and ORP values in patients with at least one abnormal semen parameter versus normal semen parameters.
ORP: oxidation-reduction potential.
Data extracted from the article Agarwal et al (Asian J Androl 2019;21:565–9) [63].
Fig. 7Distribution of oxidation-reduction potential (ORP) in patients with at least one abnormal sperm parameter versus patients with normal sperm parameters, showing the established cut-off value of 1.34 mV/106 sperm/mL. Adapted from the article of Agarwal et al (Asian J Androl 2019 [epub ahead of print]) [63].