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. 1990 Aug 15;143(4):273-8.

Therapeutic donor insemination with frozen semen

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Therapeutic donor insemination with frozen semen

S G Scott et al. CMAJ. .

Abstract

Although it is now accepted that cryopreserved semen must, on ethical and medicolegal grounds, be used for donor insemination many clinicians still believe that it has an unacceptably reduced fecundability rate as compared with fresh semen. We studied the outcome of 81 recipients who started therapeutic donor insemination (TDI) treatment during 1986 in a program that used exclusively cryopreserved semen; 55 had never undergone TDI and were receiving the first series (six cycles), 6 were receiving the second series (also six cycles), and 20 had achieved pregnancy through TDI previously and were starting the treatment again. Insemination with semen stored in 0.5-ml French straws was performed daily during the periovulatory period while the modified Insler score was 10 or greater out of 15. A total of 42 (52%) of the recipients became pregnant within six TDI cycles; 4 (10%) had a spontaneous abortion. An average of 4.8 straws were used per cycle among those who became pregnant and 5.1 per cycle among those who did not. On average 2.6 cycles were required to achieve pregnancy. The overall fecundability rate was 14.6%. We conclude that a TDI program involving exclusively frozen semen can be operated with a success rate comparable to rates achieved with fresh semen if a simple, established cryopreservation method and an uncomplicated clinical management protocol are used.

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