Medical News Storing sperm in a freezer for a decade hardly affects birth rates

Medical News Storing sperm in a freezer for a decade hardly affects birth rates

by Emily Smith
0 comments 70 views
A+A-
Reset

Medical News

Health

24 June 2019

Frozen sperm stored in liquid nitrogen at a sperm bankTHOMAS FREDBERG/SCIENCE PHOTO LIBRARY
By New Scientist Staff and Press AssociationLong-term sperm freezing makes little difference to live birth rates. Despite a time limit imposed in many countries on storing frozen sperm, a large sperm bank study has found this may not be necessary.
The findings are based on a retrospective analysis of 119,558 semen samples from donors at the Hunan Sperm Bank in China.
The samples were arranged in three groups: those kept in cryostorage for between six months and five years, those stored for between six and 10 years, and those stored for between 11 and 15 years.

Advertisement

The study found that the frozen sperm’s survival rate after thawing did decline over the 15-year study period – from 85 per cent to 74 per cent survival. However, this decline made little difference to the pregnancy and live birth rate in women using these samples for donor insemination, with cumulative live birth rates of 82.2 per cent, 80.2 per cent and 80.0 per cent in the three storage groups respectively.
Success rates were similarly comparable when the frozen sperm samples were used in IVF, with live birth rates of 81.6 per cent, 79.1 per cent and 73.9 per cent in the three groups.
Results of the study are being presented at the European Society of Human Reproduction and Embryology annual meeting in Vienna.

More on these topics:
pregnancy and birth

You may also like

Leave a Comment