Objective: To study the effects of undetectable inhibin B concentrations on the outcomes of testicular sperm extraction (TESE) and of intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI).
Design: Retrospective study.
Setting: Obstetrics, gynecology, and reproductive biology departments.
Patient(s): We carried out TESE on 75 men with nonobstructive azoospermia: 42 men had an inhibin B concentration of <m15 pg/mL (group 1), and 33 had an inhibin B concentration of > or = 15 pg/mL (group 2). Twenty-five ICSI cycles were carried out using sperm from men in group 1 (group A1), and 35 ISCI cycles were carried out using sperm from men in group 2 (group A2). The outcomes of ICSI in groups A1 and A2 were compared with those of 81 ICSI cycles performed for obstructive azoospermia (group B).
Intervention(s): Testicular sperm extraction, testicular spermatozoa cryopreservation, and ICSI.
Main outcome measure(s): Testicular sperm extraction outcome, pregnancy, and delivery.
Result(s): Sperm were significantly less likely to be successfully recovered from men in group 1 than from those in group 2 (21% vs. 48%). The inhibin B concentration was significantly lower in men in whom TESE failed, but the FSH concentration did not differ. The implantation rate per embryo transferred was twofold lower in group A1 (7.4%) than in group B (16%), but this difference is not statistically significant.
Conclusion(s): Patients with undetectable inhibin B concentration should be informed of the low chances of positive testicular biopsy, and more embryos should be transferred to improve the success rate.