P–010 Timing of TESE does not affect laboratory outcomes
What is the outcome of intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI) using testicular spermatozoa obtained on the day of oocyte pick-up (OPU) or the day before OPU. Testicular spermatozoa were obtaining the one day before OPU does not affect fertilization rate, top quality embryo on day 3, and blastocyst utilization rate. Usually, TESE is performed just before OPU. OPU is generally cancelled if no sperm is retrieved. The use of fresh testicular spermatozoa, obtained the day before OPU could offer the couple and the caring team both medical and practical advantages. The benefits of this approach, however, has not been evaluated in detail. An uncontrolled preliminary study has revealed that regular fertilization and pregnancy rates could be achieved with sperm extraction performed one day before OPU. This was a single-center retrospective study in Bahceci BIH IVF center. Sixty-six patients suffering from azoospermia from January 2015 to December 2020 were evaluated. TESE was performed either on the OPU day (43 patients; group A) or one day before OPU (23 patients; group B). In this study, primary outcomes were motile spermatozoa at ICSI, fertilization, top quality embryo on day 3, and blastocyst utilization rate. Statistical analyses were performed with chi-squared tests. There is no statistical difference fertilization rate (72.3% vs. 72.2, p > 0.05), top quality embryo rate on day 3 (58.3% vs 58.3%, p > 0.05) and blast utilization rate (43.98% vs 49.58%, p > 0.05) between group A and B, respectively. The retrospective nature of this study may not eliminate potential bias. On the contrary, the strength of our study is that all procedures were performed by the same operators, so there are no operator-dependent differences. More research is needed to prove our findings. Wider implications of the findings: TESE procedure can be performed one day before OPU without compromising success. 1