Abstract
Diagnosis of male infertility has mainly been based on the World Health Organization (WHO) manual-based semen parameter's concentration, motility and morphology. It has, however, become apparent that none of these parameters are reliable markers for evaluation of the fertility potential of a couple. A search for better markers has led to an increased focus on sperm chromatin integrity testing in fertility work-up and assisted reproductive techniques. During the last couple of decades, numerous sperm DNA integrity tests have been developed. These are claimed to be characterized by a lower intraindividual variation, less intralaboratory and interlaboratory variation and thus less subjective than the conventional sperm analysis. However, not all the sperm chromatin integrity tests have yet been shown to be of clinical value. So far, the test that has been found to have the most stable clinical threshold values in relation to fertility is the sperm chromatin structure assay (SCSA), a flow cytometric test that measures the susceptibility of sperm DNA to acid-induced DNA denaturation in situ. Sperm DNA fragmentation as measured by SCSA has shown to be an independent predictor of successful pregnancy in first pregnancy planners as well as in couples undergoing intrauterine insemination, and can be used as a tool in investigation, counseling and treatment of involuntary childlessness. More conflicting data exist regarding the role of sperm DNA fragmentation in relation to fertilization, pre-embryo development and pregnancy outcome in in vitro fertilization and intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI).
Keywords: assisted reproductive techniques, infertility, sperm chromatin structure assay, sperm DNA
Introduction
In Western countries, up to one-fourth of couples in reproductive age are seeking medical help for involuntary childlessness.1
Diagnosis of male infertility has mainly been based on the traditional semen parameter's concentration, motility and morphology. It has, however, become apparent that none of these parameters recommended by the World Health Organization (WHO)2 are sufficient for the determination of male fertility capacity or for evaluation of the fertility potential of a couple.
The WHO parameters only address few aspects of sperm quality and function and this may explain why the discriminative power in relation to fertility is quite low.3, 4
In parallel with the growing knowledge in the area of early reproductive function, the focus on the causes of infertility or subfertility in a couple has decreased. The work-up is often minimal and the fertility markers poor why many couples are diagnosed with so-called unexplained infertility. In fact, most men seeking medical help for involuntary childlessness never get an explanation for the causes lying behind their reduced semen quality.
On the other hand, the use of assisted reproductive techniques (ARTs) has increased substantially, in particular, intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI).1, 5 Although in the beginning of the era of ICSI the indication for treatment was severely reduced semen quality, even now couples with male partners, not having any apparent sperm defects, request for and are treated with ICSI. However, ART treatment is a symptomatic treatment, where only 25–30% of the treatments result in a child.6 One of the causes behind the limited success rate of ART can be the lack of markers to diagnose and find the underlying causes to male subfertility and also a lack of methods to identify the type of ART treatment giving the best chances of pregnancy in a given couple.
The search for more optimal predictors of fertility has resulted in a growing focus on the sperm DNA integrity.7, 8 During the past decades, a variety of techniques to assess the sperm chromatin integrity have been developed. One of these methods is the sperm chromatin structure assay (SCSA), first described by Evenson et al.9 SCSA has shown to be an independent marker of fertility in vivo and may also have a potential to contribute to the more successful use of ART in the future. In this chapter, we will review how sperm DNA integrity as measured by SCSA can be used as a tool in diagnosis and treatment of involuntary childlessness.
Male infertility/subfertility
Etiology of male infertility/subfertility
Involuntary childlessness is a complex condition that can be a result of female or male as well as combined factors. In 20% of cases, the predominant cause is solely male-related and in another 30%, anomalies in both partners contribute to the childlessness.2 Genital infections, endocrine disturbances and immunological factors have been regarded as the most common causes of male subfertility. However, to an increasing degree, genetic and other molecular causes have been identified as contributing explanatory factors,10 and among these are the occurrences of chromatin defects assessed as breaks in sperm nuclear DNA.7, 11, 12, 13, 14
In 60–75% of the male-caused cases, the etiology of reduced semen quality remains unexplained and is referred to as idiopathic infertility.2
Diagnosis of male infertility/subfertility
Traditionally, the diagnosis of male infertility or subfertility is based on an analysis of sperm concentration, motility and morphology.2 However, as the analysis is mainly performed by light microscopy of 100–200 spermatozoa, the analysis is biased on a high level of subjectivity resulting in a higher grade of intralaboratory and interlaboratory variations,15, 16 and therefore, a low predictive value of the WHO analysis is reported. The WHO parameters address only few aspects of sperm quality and function, and during the last decades, several other sperm function tests have been suggested and used, including vital staining, biochemical analysis of semen, hypo-osmotic swelling test, antisperm antibody test, sperm penetration assay, hemizona assay, reactive oxygen species (ROS) tests and computer-assisted sperm analysis.13 However, few of the tests are implemented in clinical routine.17
Partly owing to the low predictive value of the tests used in diagnosing male infertility or subfertility and partly owing to the growing availability and use of ART, the focus on the causes of infertility or subfertility has decreased. Such a switch in the routines for investigation of infertile couples implies that an increasing proportion of cases remain unexplained and the possibilities of developing a causal therapy become severely limited.
Although the origin and mechanisms responsible for sperm DNA damage are not yet fully understood, an increasing amount of data demonstrate an association between sperm DNA damage and fertility.7, 11, 12, 14, 18, 19, 20, 21 As a consequence, it has been proposed that sperm DNA integrity could be a possible fertility predictor to be used as a supplement to the traditional sperm parameters.11, 22, 23
Causes of sperm DNA damage
Spermatogenesis is a complex process of male germ cell proliferation and maturation from immature diploid to mature haploid spermatozoa,24 where damage of sperm DNA or its chromatin structure can occur at any step (reviewed in Ref. 7). It has been proposed that DNA damage in sperm can be because of unrepaired DNA breaks during the spermatogenetic chromatin remodeling and packaging or abortive apoptosis during spermatogenesis. Other possible causes are the effect of endogenous endonucleases and caspases, exposure to a variety of genotoxic agents because of therapeutic reasons or because of occupational or environmental exposures, and finally, the action of oxidative damage.14 Most likely, these factors are interrelating. A defective checkpoint at the crossing-over process during spermatogenesis or deficiencies in the protamination process will likely make the sperm more vulnerable to oxidative stress (OS) at a later moment. The mechanism that probably, for which most evidence exists, is the OS caused by an imbalance between the antioxidant ability in seminal plasma and the production of ROS, leading to the formation of oxidative products such as 8OHdG. The sperm cell membrane, being rich in unsaturated fatty acids, is easily attacked by ROS with further detrimental effects on nuclear membranes as well as on sperm DNA.25 Furthermore, sperms lack antioxidants and DNA repair systems,26 and protection of the offspring from the negative effects of DNA strand breaks originating from the spermatozoa is completely dependent on the repair capacity of the oocyte and the early embryo. Leukocytes and abnormal spermatozoa in the semen are the main sources of ROS in semen;14, 27, 28 however, increased scrotal temperature due to illness such as fever29, 30, 31 or varicocele32 are other reported sources. Also, older men are reported to have sperm with more DNA fragmentation than younger men, which is likely because of OS.33, 34, 35, 36, 37 Moreover, smokers have an increased level of oxidative damage in their sperm DNA compared with non-smokers.38, 39, 40, 41, 42, 43, 44
Analysis of sperm DNA fragmentation
Currently, three major tests of sperm DNA fragmentation are most frequently used, including the Comet assay (single-cell gel electrophoresis),45, 46, 47 the terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase-mediated dUDP nick end-labeling (TUNEL) assay48 and the SCSA.9, 11 Comet, TUNEL and SCSA all label single- or double-stranded DNA breaks; however, unfortunately, most of the available techniques for detection of sperm DNA damage provide limited information on the nature of the DNA lesions detected and none of them enable us to depict the exact etiology and pathogenesis of impairment of sperm DNA.
Whereas Comet assay is a fluorescence microscopic test, TUNEL assay can be applied both in bright field/fluorescence microscopy and by flow cytometry. In Comet, sperm cells are mixed with melted agarose and then placed on a glass slide. The cells are lysed and then subjected to horizontal electrophoresis. DNA is visualized with the help of a DNA-specific fluorescent dye and DNA damage is quantified by measuring the displacement between the genetic material of the nucleus comet head and the resulting tail. In the TUNEL assay, terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase incorporates labeled (by and large, fluorescent) nucleotides to 3′-OH at single- and double-strand DNA breaks to create a signal, which increases with the number of DNA breaks. The fluorescence intensity of each scored sperm is determined as ‘positive' or ‘negative' for sperm on a microscope slide. In a flow cytometer, the fraction of positive sperm is represented by the cells above a threshold channel value on a relative fluorescence intensity scale.
SCSA is a flow cytometric test where sperm DNA breaks can be evaluated indirectly through the DNA denaturability. The assay measures the susceptibility of sperm DNA to acid-induced DNA denaturation in situ, followed by staining with the fluorescent dye acridine orange.9, 11, 49 By using a flow cytometer, 5000–10 000 sperms can be analyzed within few seconds and thus provides a less subjective result compared with the WHO analysis where only 1–300 cells are analyzed. Through a specific SCSA software (SCSA-Soft; SCSA Diagnostics, Inc., Brookings, SD, USA), a scatter plot is created, showing the ratio of green and red sperm. The percentage of red sperm is called DNA fragmentation index (DFI),11 visualized by a histogram (Figure 1). These are the sperms with denaturated DNA.
The sperm with the most intensive green color is called high DNA stainable (HDS) sperm. It is still unclear about the precise mechanisms and types of DNA damage that are lying behind DFI and HDS; however, it is believed that DFI is related to the percentage of sperm with DNA breaks or protamine defects. HDS is thought to represent immature spermatozoa.11
SCSA is only one of the several methods evaluating sperm DNA integrity. However, so far, it is the only method, which has demonstrated clear and clinically useful cutoff levels for inferring male fertility potential.9, 22, 23, 49 SCSA is a standardized test.11 It is performed according to a strict protocol,11 and a specific dedicated software (SCSA-Soft) is used to analyze the flow cytometric data. Apart from being subjected to a very limited intralaboratory variation,50 however, the SCSA analysis has shown to be very robust to variation between laboratories. In an external quality control based on >180 samples, a high (r=0.8) correlation was found between the values obtained by our laboratory and those from a control laboratory. Furthermore, not only was there a high level of correlation between the results reported by two independent laboratories that strictly followed the SCSA protocol, but the absolute DFI values obtained at two different places, using different equipments, did not, on average, differ by >1%.51
Studies have demonstrated that these three sperm DNA integrity tests, SCSA, TUNEL and Comet assays, generally correlate moderately with each other (a coefficient of correlation between 0.4 and 0.7), which indicates that the tests likely are expressing different aspects of sperm DNA damage.
SCSA and the chance of spontaneous pregnancy
Two population-based studies, a US study including 165 couples9 and a Danish study including 215 couples,49 have demonstrated that DFI as measured with SCSA is an excellent predictor of subfecundity in the normal population. The results of these two studies were in well accordance with each other and also independent of other standard sperm parameters. In the interval of DFI 0–20%, the chance of spontaneous pregnancy was constant. When DFI was >20%, the chance of obtaining a spontaneous pregnancy was decreased and close to zero, when the DFI level passed 30–40%. Even though DFI was <20%, only 13% of all cycles resulted in a pregnancy. Therefore, in a normal population, not selected because of infertility problems, SCSA is a valuable tool to identify men who are at risk of not giving rise to a pregnancy. It is not possible to get the same information from the traditional WHO sperm parameters. Even among men with low sperm concentration, poor motility or morphology, there will be men with a certain potential of fertility.3
Almost similar results were obtained in a recent Swedish case–control study of 137 infertile and 127 fertile men.23 The risk of being infertile was found to be increased when DFI, as measured by SCSA, was >20% in men with normal standard semen parameters, an odds ratio (OR) of 5.1 (confidence interval (95% CI): 1.2–23), compared with fertile controls. If one of the WHO parameters were abnormal, the OR for infertility would already increase at a DFI >10% (OR: 16; CI: 4.2–60). A DFI >20% was found in 40% of the men with otherwise normal standard parameters. DFI was also shown to be an independent predictor of spontaneous pregnancy (Figure 2). In another study of 350 Swedish men from infertile couples, Erenpreiss et al.52 found that 20% of the men with otherwise normal WHO sperm parameters had a SCSA-DFI >20%.
The association between sperm DNA damage and the traditional semen parameters is shown to be only weak-to-moderate.51, 53 It is also shown that 25–40% of infertile men may have normal standard sperm characteristics according to WHO criteria, but a DFI >20–30%.22, 23, 52
SCSA and the chance of pregnancy in ART
ART includes all technologies that involve the handling of sperm outside the body, as in intrauterine insemination (IUI), or handling of oocytes, sperm and embryos as in in vitro fertilization (IVF) and ICSI.54 In IVF, the spermatozoa's ability to penetrate the zona pellucida of the oocyte is utilized. In ICSI, however, one single spermatozoon is selected and injected directly into the cytoplasm of the oocyte. Owing to these differences, it may not be correct to report results from the three types of treatments together, as has been the case in most of the published SCSA studies. In those studies reporting the three treatment types separately, the number of patients is included and thus the statistical power has generally been relatively low. The first SCSA study to indicate an association between sperm DNA damage and reduced pregnancy chances was published by Saleh et al.,55 who performed a small study where 12 of 19 couples had a DFI value as measured by SCSA >28% and no pregnancy was obtained. Boe-Hansen et al.56 in a study on 48 IUI couples found only two couples with a DFI value >30%, and even here pregnancy was obtained. Recently, in a study of 387 IUI cycles, we have shown that even in IUI, SCSA-DFI can be used as an independent predictor of fertility.22 Although the proportion of children born per cycle was 19% when the DFI value was <30%, those with a DFI value >30% only had a take-home-baby rate of 1.5%. In this group, the OR for delivery in relation to a DFI <30% was 0.07 (95% CI: 0.01–0.48; Figure 3).
In the same study, 388 IVF and 223 ICSI cycles were included. For these couples, it was not possible to find any threshold value for DFI that could predict the result of the treatments. However, when DFI was >30%, the result of ICSI was significantly better than that of IVF (OR for delivery was 2.17; CI: 1.04–4.51). These data are in agreement with other previous smaller reports using TUNEL or Comet assays, showing that sperm DNA damage is more predictive in IVF and much less so in ICSI.57 Also, a very recent study,58 using Comet, has shown that the difference in percentage of sperms with impairment of DNA integrity, when comparing successful and unsuccessful treatment, is much more clear for IVF than for ICSI. In contrast, one single study, not discriminating the 100 IVF or ICSI treatments included, reported that DFI threshold values were not valid.59 Although available data indicate that ICSI may be the most effective ART treatment in couples where DFI is >30%, new prospective, randomized controlled studies testing whether there is a difference between IVF and ICSI with regard to pregnancy outcome should be performed. With regard to this issue, the power of the available studies is not strong enough.
In our study, no associations between fertilization rates and levels of sperm DNA damage were seen. This is in line with findings from most other recent studies using SCSA22, 60, 61, 62, 63, 64 or other sperm DNA integrity assays.45, 65, 66, 67, 68, 69, 70, 71 On the other hand, the presence of damaged sperm DNA was shown to have a significant inverse relationship with fertilization in other studies.40, 57 Although some authors have reported similar cleavage stage embryo developmental rates between high and low DFI groups as measured by SCSA,56, 59, 60, 61 others have shown that sperm DNA damage is negatively correlated with embryo quality after IVF and ICSI.32, 40, 45 Two studies have also reported that men with high levels of DNA fragmentation are at increased risk of low blastocyst formation compared with men with a low DFI.62, 72
Although fertilization and embryo development may be independent of sperm DNA integrity, it has been suggested that the post-fertilization development of the pre-embryo can be impaired by such incomplete or aberrant sperm DNA repair by the oocyte leading to early miscarriages57 or in the worst cases, diseases in the offspring.8, 73, 74 In our study of about 1000 couples, no relationship was seen between sperm DNA fragmentation and unexplained pregnancy loss.22
The other SCSA parameter, HDS, was neither in our study nor in other studies found to be of predictive value of pregnancy.
SCSA—intraindividual variation
One of the main problems with using sperm quality as a diagnostic tool is the huge intraindividual variation reported for sperm concentration, motility and morphology.
In contrast, the first SCSA reports found a low intraindividual variation for DFI.9 In our hands, however, a significant day-to-day variation in infertile men with a coefficient of variation of about 30% is seen.75, 76 This is in line with the intraindividual variation reported for the other standard sperm parameters.15, 16 In all, 37% of patients having a DFI >30% in the first test had a DFI <30% in the second test.75 A total of 27% of those with DFI values in the range of 20–30% in the first test had a DFI >30% in the second test. However, our recent data have demonstrated that, despite this apparent intraindividual variation, a single SCSA analysis performed on a random day in relation to the infertility work-up or to the conception is a strong predictor of infertility.23 In other words, the relatively high intraindividual variation for DFI does not invalidate the SCSA as a clinically useful marker of subfertility. Moreover, data from a so far unpublished study support this statement. Among 616 men who had their semen analyzed by SCSA both in infertility work-up and in the actual ART cycle, 85% of the men remained in the same category of DFI; ≤30% or >30% from the first to second measurement. This implies that only in 15% of men a repeated analysis implied a reclassification of the SCSA-based prediction of fertility potential of the patient.76
Diverging points of view regarding the clinical usefulness of the SCSA test
Although data, convincing with regard to clinical usefulness, are available, sperm DNA integrity testing in the daily clinical practice is still widely debated. During the last couple of years, some authors have challenged the clinical value of the SCSA test.77
One such example is a recent publication from the Practice Committee of the American Society for Reproductive Medicine (ASRM).78 Although ASRM, after a meta-analysis on 14 published studies, based on SCSA, TUNEL and Comet assays, stated that fragmented sperm DNA is more frequent in infertile than in fertile and may contribute to poor reproductive performance, they concluded that, so far, there is no proven role for routine DNA integrity testing in the evaluation of infertility. Other examples contributing to the debate are two other meta-analyses including both TUNEL and SCSA studies. Both Collins and co-workers,79 who considered 13 IVF/ICSI studies (nine carried out by SCSA and four by the TUNEL assay), and Zini and co-workers,80 who considered nine IVF (six carried out by TUNEL assay and three by SCSA) and 11 ICSI studies (six carried out by SCSA and five by the TUNEL assay) found only small associations between DFI and pregnancy outcome in IVF and ICSI. On the other hand, Barratt in an Editorial in Molecular Human Reproduction (2010)81 claims that ‘… there is an urgent need to develop new assessments of male reproductive potential and testing of DNA and its packaging in the human spermatozoa is likely to be a very important tool in the armamentarium'. Importantly, there are already considerable data to support the clinical use of DNA damage assays and in particular the SCSA.
In our opinion, there are several reasons for the confusion regarding the clinical usefulness of sperm DNA integrity testing. First of all, the vast majority of studies are based on small patient cohorts and are, therefore, underpowered. Second, most available reports focus on difference between fertile and infertile subjects in percentage of sperms with DNA damage rather than on predictive value of these tests in a clinical set-up; third, in the previously mentioned ASRM reports and meta-analysis, no discrimination is made between the results obtained by different methods for sperm DNA testing, SCSA, Comet and TUNEL. Last, uniform criteria for selection of patients for these studies are lacking. For instance, in many studies, no consideration is taken to the possible contribution of the female partner. Furthermore, to reach higher number of patients, couples receiving different types of ART are pooled together. As indicated above, sperm DNA testing seems to be the most powerful predictor for in vivo fertility and among the two in vitro methods, more related to the outcome of IVF than that of ICSI.
So far, clinical threshold values have only been established for the SCSA. Two meta-analyses including only SCSA studies have been performed. Although Evenson and Wixon based on 14 papers18 reported that in IVF and ICSI, clinical pregnancy was closely related to DFI as measured by SCSA. Li et al.63 based on three papers found that DFI did not influence the chance of clinical pregnancy after IVF or ICSI treatment. In general, the interpretation of meta-analysis should be made carefully, as they are vulnerable to biases and confounding factors inherent in the original data. A particular problem with the latter study is the low number of patients included in the analysis.
SCSA—clinical recommendations
SCSA represents a valuable tool in diagnosis and treatment of infertility. The usefulness of the method is, however, first of all relating to in vivo fertility and, in particular, in couples diagnosed with the so-called unexplained infertility. In 20% of couples where the man has otherwise normal semen parameters and they fulfil the criteria for IUI, the DFI is >30%. In these couples, the chance of pregnancy is close to zero22 and therefore, they should be referred directly to IVF/ICSI. By such a strategy change, one-fifth of all couples who normally are referred to IUI can avoid the physical and psychological burden that an unsuccessful ART treatment represents.
Up to 40% of all unexplained infertility cases can be related to a high DFI. In a couple where DFI is between 20% and 30%, time to pregnancy will be longer than in those with a lower DFI level—information that can be utilized in counseling the couple. Combining SCSA analysis with assessment of traditional sperm parameters, gives a higher precision in the prediction of fertility. If one of the traditional sperm parameters is abnormal, fertility is reduced already at a DFI >10%.
In couple where DFI is >30%, IVF or ICSI should be chosen as the first choice treatment. See flow chart for the recommended use of SCSA in diagnosis and treatment of infertility (Figure 4).
However, as very few clinics have implemented sperm chromatin integrity testing, many couples are not aware of their actual sperm DNA defects and thus the choice of treatment is often inadequate. One reason for the relatively low implementation rate of SCSA is the necessity of a flow cytometer to perform the analysis. Very few laboratories have access to such equipment. On the other hand, sperm samples can be stored at −80°C and shipped to a centralized SCSA laboratory.
Because of the relatively high intraindividual variation shown in the largest studies, one should recommend repeated SCSA testing in only those men who were not ICSI candidates, and having a DFI >20% as in this subgroup, a switch of DFI to a higher level may have implications for the selection of the ART treatment (Figure 4).
A significant amount of disturbances in sperm DNA integrity is thought to be a result of OS caused by free oxidative radicals in semen. Some reports where men with a high DFI have been treated with antioxidant therapy have been published; however, the study populations have been small and data conflicting.35, 82, 83, 84, 85, 86, 87 Moreover, the underlying causes to the high sperm DNA damage in the study populations were not known. Despite this, it should not be neglected that SCSA in the future may have the potential to not only predict the chance of fertility in vivo or in vitro, but also to give indications for a causal treatment of disturbances of male fertility.
Development of newly improved tests depicting the cause of sperm DNA damage is the next step in extended use of sperm DNA integrity testing as a tool in diagnosis and treatment of involuntary childlessness.
The authors declare no competing financial interests.
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