Sperm integrity pre- and post-chemotherapy in men with testicular germ cell cancer

Human reproduction (Oxford, England), 21(7), 1781-1786

DOI 10.1093/humrep/del084 PMID 16601009 Source

Abstract

Background

While (partial) recovery of spermatogenesis, observed by means of standard semen analysis, has been seen in testicular cancer patients after chemotherapy with cisplatin, sperm genomic integrity and its implication for the patient's fertility are poorly understood.

Methods

Semen and serum from 22 patients treated for testicular cancer were analysed pre- and post-chemotherapy. Besides routine semen analysis, sperm samples were evaluated by computerized karyometric image analysis (CKIA), chromomycin-A3 assay (CMA3, chromatin condensation) and TdT-mediated dUTP nick-end labelling assay (TUNEL, DNA damage). Serum FSH, LH and testosterone concentrations were measured.

Results

Ejaculate volume decreased post-chemotherapy (P<0.05). External sperm characteristics (CKIA morphometry) and sperm counts did not deteriorate after chemotherapy. An improvement in DNA condensation was assessed after chemotherapy (37 versus 50% and 47.5 versus 63.7% for CMA3 and CKIA respectively; both P<0.005); yet a high percentage of TUNEL-positive sperm was found in the samples (21 versus 25% for pre- and post-chemotherapy samples respectively). These values were significantly higher than those of a convenience sample of normozoospermic males attending pre-IVF screening. Serum FSH and LH (IU/l) increased after chemotherapy compared with pretreatment levels (8.1 versus 16.7 and 4.5 vs 6.8; both P<0.05, respectively).

Conclusions

Despite the improvement in sperm chromatin packaging after chemotherapy, an abnormally high percentage of DNA-damaged sperm was found in these samples. As sperm quality does not reach normal levels after treatment, it remains difficult to outline the best strategy and guidance concerning fertility potential of testicular cancer patients.

Topics

sperm dna damage chemotherapy, testicular cancer fertility after treatment, sperm integrity post chemotherapy, male fertility after cancer treatment, cisplatin effects on sperm, sperm chromatin condensation chemotherapy, tunel assay sperm dna fragmentation, testicular cancer sperm quality, post chemotherapy semen analysis, cancer survivor male fertility, sperm dna fragmentation testing

Cite this article

Spermon JR, Ramos, L., Wetzels, A., Sweep, F., Braat, D., Kiemeney, L., & Witjes JA (2006). Sperm integrity pre- and post-chemotherapy in men with testicular germ cell cancer. *Human reproduction (Oxford, England)*, *21*(7), 1781-1786. https://doi.org/10.1093/humrep/del084

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