Journal of Clinical Medicine (Jul 2021)

Oral Antioxidant Treatment of Men Significantly Improves the Reproductive Outcome of IVF Cycles

  • Paola Scaruffi,
  • Emanuele Licata,
  • Elena Maccarini,
  • Claudia Massarotti,
  • Francesca Bovis,
  • Fausta Sozzi,
  • Sara Stigliani,
  • Alessandro Dal Lago,
  • Ida Casciano,
  • Rocco Rago,
  • Paola Anserini

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm10153254
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 15
p. 3254

Abstract

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Some 30% to 80% of male sub-fertility may be associated with oxidative stress that damages spermatozoa and can decrease success of in vitro fertilization (IVF) techniques. This multicenter, longitudinal, prospective study aimed to investigate whether oral antioxidant supplementation improved the reproductive competence of men who had had low fertilization rates in their previous intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI) cycles without azoospermia or severe oligozoospermia or any identifiable andrological disease. Seventy-seven men from couples who had an ICSI attempt with unexplained p = 0.027), total motile sperm count (p = 0.003), progressive motility (p < 0.0001), and a decreasing trend of DNA-fragmented spermatozoa. Embryological outcomes (fertilization, embryo quality, blastocyst development) were significantly higher in T90 than T0 cycles. No T0 cycle resulted in an evolutive pregnancy. Conversely, in T90 cycles 29 singleton clinical pregnancies were obtained. No negative neonatal outcomes were recorded in newborns after antioxidant treatment. Diet supplementation of men who have had low fertilization rates in their previous ICSI cycles with a combination of myo-inositol, alpha-lipoic acid, folic acid, coenzyme Q10, zinc, selenium, betaine, and vitamins may improve semen reproductive potential and ICSI clinical outcome.

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