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- Title
Idiopathic secondary azoospermia occurrence in men with oligospermia over time.
- Authors
Karavani, Gilad; Kattan, Mohamed S.; Lau, Susan; Lo, Kirk C.; Grober, Ethan D.; Mehra, Vrati M.; Akroof, Bader; Lajkosz, Katherine; Jarvi, Keith
- Abstract
Purpose: To investigate the occurrence of idiopathic secondary azoospermia (ISA) in men with oligospermia over time and identify risk factors for ISA in this population. Methods: This was a retrospective cohort study conducted in a university-affiliated male infertility clinic. A total of 1056 oligospermic men (concentration < 15 million/ml (M/ml) and no azoospermia) with at least two SA done between 2000 and 2019 were included. The primary outcome was the occurrence of ISA by oligospermia severity. Results: In the entire cohort, 31 patients (2.9%) eventually became azoospermic with time. The ≤ 1 M/ml extremely severe oligospermia (ESO) group (283 patients) had significantly higher rates of ISA in each time period compared to the 1–5 M/ml severe oligospermia (SO) (310 patients) and 5–15 M/ml mild oligospermia (MO) (463 patients) groups (p < 0.05 for all comparisons), with rates of 21.1% in the ESO, 4.8% in the SO, and 0% in the MO group (p = 0.02) after 3–5 years, reaching 32% after 5 years in the ESO group compared to no cases in the other two groups (p = 0.006). Parameters shown to predict ISA were initial concentration < 1 M/ml (OR 22.12, p < 0.001) and time interval of > 3 and 5 years (OR 4.83 and 6.84, p = 0.009 and < 0.001, respectively), whereas testosterone levels were negatively associated with ISA (OR 0.88, p = 0.03). Conclusions: Men with ≤ 1 M/ml, especially those with low testosterone levels, have a dramatically increased chance of becoming azoospermic with time. Therefore, sperm banking should be recommended in these cases. Men with a sperm concentration above 1 M/ml have low chances of becoming azoospermic, even after 3 or more years.
- Subjects
MALE infertility; AZOOSPERMIA; SPERM banks; FERTILITY clinics; INFERTILITY; OLIGOSPERMIA
- Publication
Journal of Assisted Reproduction & Genetics, 2024, Vol 41, Issue 8, p2163
- ISSN
1058-0468
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1007/s10815-024-03179-6