4.4 Article

MiOXSYS® and OxiSperm® II assays appear to provide no clinical utility for determining oxidative stress in human sperm-results from repeated semen collections

Journal

ANDROLOGY
Volume 11, Issue 8, Pages 1566-1578

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/andr.13356

Keywords

fertility; infertility; ROS; seminal plasma; spermatazoa

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This study found that the MiOXSYS(R) and OxiSperm(R) II systems for measuring sperm oxidative stress may have limited diagnostic potential. There were no significant associations between these systems and sperm function or oxidative stress. This may be due to limited understanding of their biochemistry and clinical application.
Background: Oxidative stress in semen contributes up to 80% of all infertility diagnosis. Diagnostics to measure oxidative stress in semen was recently added to the 6th edition WHO methods manual, although diagnostic predictive values need to be interpreted with caution as there are still several research questions yet to be answered. Objectives: To determine the natural fluctuations in semen redox indicators (MiOXSYS (R) and OxiSperm (R) II) within and between men and their association with markers of sperm oxidative stress. Materials and methods: Total, 118 repeat semen samples from 31 generally healthy men aged 18-45 years, over 6 months. Standard semen analysis as per 5th WHO manual. Semen redox levels measured via MiOXSYV (R)) and OxiSperm (R) II. Additional attributes of sperm quality; HBA binding assay and sperm hyperactivation and oxidative stress; DNA fragmentation (Halo (R) Sperm) and lipid peroxidation (BODIPY (TM) 581/591 C11) were assessed. Results: Samples with high redox-potential (MiOXSYS (R) >= 1.47 sORP/10(6) sperm/ml) had lower sperm, motility, morphology and higher DNA fragmentation (P < 0.05). Upon further analysis, these associations were driven solely by the adjustment of sperm concentration (10(6)/ml) in normalised redox-potential. No significant associations between NBT-reactivity (OxiSperm (R) II) and measures of the sperm function or oxidative stress were observed (P> 0.05). Fluctuations in semen redox levels varied greater between men than within men over the study period. Discussion: Neither MiOXSYS (R) nor OxiSperm (R) II assays were predictive of sperm function or sperm oxidative stress. This was likely due at least in part to limited understanding of their biochemistry and clinical application. As a result, these assays seem to provide no additional clinical utility beyond that of a standard semen analysis, highlighting the imperative for the development of new robust point-of-care devices for accurately determining sperm oxidative stress. Conclusion: These findings suggest that MiOXSYS (R) and OxiSperm (R) II systems for the measurement of sperm oxidative stress may have limited diagnostic potential.

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