Outcome of Using Sperm Bound to the Zona Pellucida of Immature Oocytes for Intracytoplasmic Sperm Injection (ICSI)
NCT ID: NCT05724979
Last Updated: 2023-02-13
Study Results
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Basic Information
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COMPLETED
NA
24 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2021-03-05
2022-10-15
Brief Summary
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Detailed Description
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The sperm traits that make in vitro fertilization effective are still debated. ICSI is now the standard practice for most Assisted Reproduction technologies (ART) centers worldwide and accounts for approximately 70% of all in vitro fertilization. The routine selection of spermatozoa for ICSI depends on an embryologist subjectively selecting sperm based on their motility and morphology. It is done after an analysis of the seminal fluid, which is a poor predictive tool of male fertility and does not express the fertilization capacity of the sperm. It had assumed that mimicking the natural sperm selection may improve the quality of selected spermatozoa and hence, the clinical outcomes of ICSI. Ideally, a sperm selection method that reduces the number of spermatozoa to a subpopulation with potentially the highest quality can improve fertilization and embryo quality and development and subsequent clinical outcomes of ICSI.
Over the years, several sperm selection techniques have been developed for ICSI. However, these techniques were designed to select sperm based on a single sperm parameter (i.e. motility, density, sedimentation, nuclear integrity, etc.) and ignoring other sperm parameters related to the capability to fertilize the oocyte. Sperm selection techniques such as swim-up, microfluidics, and density gradient centrifugation yield a population of highly motile sperm but fail to mimic the rigorous natural sperm selection that considers other sperm parameters. Moreover, most of these methods require centrifugation which may negatively affect the paternal DNA and reduces the quality of sperm by increasing reactive oxygen species. Following these techniques, an embryologist has to subjectively select sperm based on their motility and morphology, which does not guarantee DNA integrity and is potentially time-consuming.
One of the developed sperm selection methods to relatively duplicate the natural selection is the hyaluronic acid (HA) binding-based Physiological intracytoplasmic sperm injection (PICSI)® dishes. The cumulus oophorus layer surrounding the oocyte consists mainly of HA. However, there is conflicting data on the results using PICSI dishes. Moreover, sperm-ZP binding comprises parameters other than HA that are not featured in PICSI dishes.
Sperm-oocyte interaction is a multi-step process involving physical and molecular interactions. It involves a complex and complementary receptor/ligand-based process between the surface proteins expressed on the ZP and the sperm. Research has unveiled several ZP protein candidates postulated to play a role in binding sperm. The main protein of these is the zona pellucida glycoprotein 3 (ZP3), whose O-linked oligosaccharide chains bind to an acrosome-intact sperm and induce an acrosomal reaction.
The study consisted of 20 patients undergoing ICSI
Our inclusion criteria included:
Female age ≤ 38 years old. Male age ≤ 50 years old. Having at least one immature oocyte (i.e. germinal vesicle (GV) or Metaphase I (MI) oocyte) for incubation with sperm to preserve mature ones for ICSI.
At least 10% sperm motility and thus testicular sperm samples were excluded. The patients were selected based on the percentage of DNA fragmentation and only those with ≤ 20% were recruited. Sibling oocytes were randomly divided into a control and an intervention group. Oocytes of the control group were injected with conventionally selected spermatozoa based on sperm morphology and motility. For the intervention group, one immature oocyte was incubated with a calculated volume of the processed semen with a concentration of 500,000 motile sperm/oocyte in a Carbon dioxide (CO2) incubator for 10 to 30 minutes and then checked for bound sperm under an inverted microscope. Only bound sperm with normal morphology were selected and transferred to a Polyvinylpyrrolidone (PVP) drop for immobilization and then injected into the cytoplasm of the MII oocytes of the intervention groups.
Clinical manipulations
1\. Controlled ovarian hyperstimulation (COH): All female patients were injected daily with a subcutaneous follicle-stimulating hormone (Gn, Gonal-F, Merck Serono, United States of America) from the 3rd to the 5th day of the menstrual cycle.
The follicles were checked for reaching the appropriate diameter (i.e. 18-20 mm) and for their number using an ultrasound device. If two or more follicles reached the appropriate diameter, a trigger (human chorionic gonadotropin (hCG)), (Ovitrelle®; Merck Serono, Switzerland) was administered intramuscularly to encourage final maturation and induce ovulation.
2-Sperm preparation: After male couples had been instructed to abstain from sexual activities for 1 to 7 days, Semen samples were collected by masturbation. Samples were placed at room temperature on warm plates or incubators at 37ºc until they were liquefied and the time of liquefaction was recorded.
Both macroscopic and microscopic assessments were performed using the 2010 World Health Organization (WHO) manual as a reference. Then, samples were treated by one of the following techniques depending on the male factor:
For the treatment groups, a specific volume of the prepared semen was co-incubated with an immature oocyte in an injection dish containing 10 µl micro drops of global media (LifeGlobal, Europe) with 3 ml of sterile equilibrated mineral oil overlay at 37 °C with 6 % CO2 for 10- 30 minutes. The volume according to the equation:
x=(pellet volume x 0.5 x 100)/(motility x count (after processing)) 3-Oocyte retrieval: Oocyte retrieval was performed approximately 36 hours following the administration of the ovulation trigger. Under ultrasound guidance, a single lumen gauge needle (Reproline, Germany) had been used to aspirate the follicles for fast oocyte pick-up with a negative pressure of 115-120 mm Hg. At the same time, the follicular fluid had been collected in round bottom sterile 14 ml falcon tubes. Under a stereo microscope, the oocyte-cumulus complexes (COCs) were identified, washed, and transferred into fertilizing global total media (LifeGlobal, Europe) and incubated at 6% CO2 at 37°C until denudation.
4- Oocyte denudation and scoring: The COCs were denudated by placing them into a 100 µ1 drop of buffered media containing hyaluronidase enzyme 80 IU/ml (LifeGlobal, Europe) for 30 to 45 seconds. Then the oocytes were gently aspirated in and out by a sterile stripper pipette resulting in the removal of the coronal cells (25). Following that, a global total w/HEPES Buffer (LifeGlobal, Europe) was used to wash the denudated oocytes. An inverted microscope equipped with automatic manipulators, Narishige, hot stage, and Hoffman optics (Olympus 1x71) was used for assessing the oocytes' maturity. The oocyte maturation assessment was as follows: mature oocytes in the metaphase II (MII) characterized by the extrusion of the polar body, and immature oocytes were either in the germinal vesicle phase (GV) characterized by a centrally located germinal vesicle or in the Metaphase I (MI) characterized by the absence of both the polar body and the germinal vesicle. Mature oocytes were then incubated in a culture medium in a Labotect incubator with 6% Co2 at 37 ºC until the time of the intracytoplasmic sperm injection. In contrast, sibling immature oocytes were incubated in a culture medium (50 µ) with a 5000 concentration of spermatozoa/oocyte and placed in the Labotect incubator for 10-30 minutes till the time of sperm selection.
5- ICSI: Mature oocytes were placed in 10 µl micro drops of the global total w/HEPES Buffer (LifeGlobal, Europe) covered with 3ml of pure equilibrated mineral oil for ICSI.
In the control group, each MII oocyte was injected with a conventionally selected sperm based on morphology and motility after being processed by density gradient centrifugation(DGC). However, in the treatment groups, ZP-bound sperm were selected from the surface of the immature oocytes through the use of a microneedle (Sunlight Medical, Jacksonville, FL, USA) and transferred in a 10 % polyvinylpyrrolidone (PVP) solution (SAGE, USA), immobilized, and then used to inject sibling MII oocytes. The procedure was carried out under an inverted microscope equipped with a holding pipette with slight negative pressure for handling the oocyte and an injection needle for injecting the sperm. The immature oocytes used for sperm selection were discarded. In all groups, the injection needle containing a single sperm was steadily and slowly moved through the cytoplasm of the MII oocyte and dropped 1 to 3µl to the center of the oocyte .
6- Outcome measures: All the embryological parameters (i.e. fertilization, cleavage, blastocyst formation, and blastocyst quality) were recorded and assessed. Signs for fertilization were observed 16-18 hours post ICSI. Furthermore, 48 and 72 h after ICSI, the cleavage rate was assessed. The blastocyst formation rate was assessed on day five post-ICSI. Embryos with high-quality blastocyst formation were classified according to Gardner's blastocyst grading system. This system assigns grades of the expansion and hatching status according to inner cell mass (ICM) and the trophectoderm (TE) quality. Good-quality blastocysts were classified as those with 6, 5, 4, or 3AA, AB, or BA. Fair-quality blastocysts were those with 6, 5, 4, or 3 BB.
7-Statistical analysis The rates of fertilization, cleavage, blastocyst formation, and high-quality blastocysts were reported as percentages for each group. Characteristics of male and female patients (age, sperm count, sperm motility, sperm morphology, number of retrieved oocytes, and number of mature and immature oocytes) were expressed as mean ± standard deviation (SD). The Student t-test was employed to compare continuous variables (fertilization rates, cleavage, blastocyst formation, and high-quality blastocysts). Statistical analysis was performed with SPSS 13.0. P-value ≤ 0.05 was considered statistically significant.
Conditions
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Study Design
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RANDOMIZED
PARALLEL
TREATMENT
QUADRUPLE
Study Groups
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control
Oocytes of the control group were injected with conventionally selected spermatozoa based on sperm morphology and motility after being processed density gradient centrifugation
No interventions assigned to this group
treatment
ZP-bound sperm were selected from the surface of the immature oocytes through the use of a microneedle (Sunlight Medical, Jacksonville, FL, USA) and transferred in a 10 % polyvinylpyrrolidone (PVP) solution (SAGE, USA), immobilized, and then used to inject sibling MII oocytes
ZP-binding
The ZP is selective with regard to binding and can bind to normally functioning sperm, especially those with a normal acrosomal region
Interventions
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ZP-binding
The ZP is selective with regard to binding and can bind to normally functioning sperm, especially those with a normal acrosomal region
Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
* The age range for all female subjects must be between 21 and 38 years old, and their male partners must be older than 24 years old and above 50 years old.
* Patients must produce at least two mature oocytes (one to be used for control and one for treatment) and one immature oocyte (to be used for selecting sperm).
* Males must show at least 10% total sperm motility
Exclusion Criteria
* Patients that had less than two mature oocytes
* Patients with no immature oocytes
* Patients with low oocyte quality.
* Cases with less than 10% motility or those with no motility such as PESA, TESA, and TESE cases.
18 Years
38 Years
ALL
Yes
Sponsors
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Al-Azhar University
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Hager Ali Muhammed Abu Elmagd
Embryologist
Principal Investigators
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Nehal A Abu Elnaga, PhD
Role: STUDY_DIRECTOR
Al-Azhar University
Locations
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Al-Azhar University
Cairo, , Egypt
Countries
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Other Identifiers
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ZP-bound sperm technique
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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