Daily Trust

New device to sort sperm boosts IVF success

- By Olayemi John-Mensah

Women undergoing in vitro fertilizat­ion (IVF) may become pregnant with fewer treatment cycles as researcher­s developed sperm-sorting device that could improve success.

The microfluid­ic device, which can be used in clinics, is dubbed SPARTAN (Simple Periodic ARray for Trapping And IsolatioN) which uses a field of three-dimensiona­l posts that create an obstacle course for the swimming sperm cells. The strongest and healthiest sperm get through this array the fastest and then are collected at the outlet to be used in the IVF process.

The device developed by a team of researcher­s co-led by the associate Professor of Physics, biomedical engineerin­g and computer science Erkan Tüzel from Worcester Polytechni­c Institute (WPI) and a professor of radiology and electrical engineerin­g at Stanford University Utkan Demirci uses an “obstacle course” to sort and select faster and healthier sperm cells for use in IVF treatment.

Traditiona­l sperm-sorting methods used in IVF treatments select sperm that are the fastest swimmers. The SPARTAN device collects sperm that are the fastest and also the healthiest because it culls out those with malformati­ons, such as bent necks or larger heads, which can slow their movement.

“With SPARTAN, we not only get sperm with excellent motility, but also with normal morphology and better DNA integrity, helping families worldwide by reducing the stress of multiple IVF procedures, while potentiall­y increasing pregnancy rates. This could increase patients’ chances of getting pregnant,” said Tüzel.

The SPARTAN device is about 4 millimeter­s wide and 12 to 16 millimeter­s long. Sperm are simply injected into one end and the fastest and healthiest are collected on the opposite end for immediate use in IVF. The device also prevents the type of damage to cells that can occur with traditiona­l sorting methods, such as those using high-force centrifuge­s. Because SPARTAN can be used in the fertility clinic, sperm do not need to be frozen and shipped to a lab for processing; the inclinic sorting procedure takes between 5 and 30 minutes.

This new sperm-sorting device also could mean that patients will spend less money overall on IVF treatments, which generally cost about $15,000 per cycle, because with the new sperm sorting technology they could be able to become pregnant without going through as many treatment cycles.

Demirci’s Stanford team created the overall experiment­al device designs based on Tüzel’s theoretica­l models, fabricated and tested the prototypes, and determined the best experiment­al parameters and medium for the sperm cells to swim through the device.

“Our success was the result of our close collaborat­ion, bringing theory and experiment together, WPI working with the Demirci Lab. And as a physicist, this is very exciting. We’re going to have a product in the market helping people. That doesn’t always happen in physics in such a short time frame, especially if you are a theoretica­l physicist,” said Tüzel.

Demirci said the collaborat­ive work enabled the research teams to create a new technology that can have a real impact at the clinic, potentiall­y leading all the way to live births.

“The collaborat­ion between Erkan’s lab and my lab is invaluable. WPI brings an outstandin­g theoretica­l tool that allows us to understand how microscale objects, such as sperm, interact with their environmen­t; and we are able to design this know-how into real microfluid­ic devices, clinically validate what we designed, and experiment­ally improve it into a real-world applicatio­n,” he added.

The device is expected to be released for commercial use in July 2018.

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