The Guardian (USA)

Covid-19 found in semen of infected men, say Chinese doctors

- Reuters

Chinese researcher­s who tested the sperm of men infected with Covid-19 found a minority had the new coronaviru­s in their semen, opening up a small chance the disease could be sexually transmitte­d, scientists have said.

A study by doctors at China’s Shangqiu municipal hospital of 38 men hospitalis­ed with the disease found that six of them(16%), tested positive for SarsCoV-2 in their semen.

The researcher­s said that while the findings were preliminar­y, and based on only a small number of infected men, more research is needed to see whether sexual transmissi­on might play a role in the Covid-19 pandemic.

“Further studies are required with respect to the detailed informatio­n about virus shedding, survival time and concentrat­ion in semen,” the team wrote in a study published in the Journal of the American Medical Associatio­n.

“If it could be proved that SarsCoV-2 can be transmitte­d sexually ... [that] might be a critical part of the prevention,” they said, “especially considerin­g the fact that Sars-CoV-2 was detected in the semen of recovering patients.”

Independen­t experts said the findings were interestin­g but should be viewed with caution and in the context of other small studies that have not found the new coronaviru­s in sperm.

A previous small study of 12 Covid-19 patients in China in February and March found that all of them tested negative for Sars-CoV-2 in semen samples.

Allan Pacey, a professor of andrology at Sheffield University in the UK, said the studies should not be seen as conclusive, as there were some technical difficulti­es in testing semen for viruses. He said the presence of SarsCoV-2 in sperm did not show whether it is active and capable of causing infection.

“However, we should not be surprised if the virus which causes Covid-19 is found in the semen of some men, since this has been shown with many other viruses such as Ebola and Zika,” he said.

Sheena Lewis, a professor of reproducti­ve medicine at Queen’s University Belfast, stressed that this was a “very small study” and said its findings were in keeping with other small studies showing low or no Sars-CoV-2 in tests of semen samples.

“However, the long-term effects of Sars-CoV-2 on male reproducti­on are not yet known,” she said.

 ??  ?? Out of 38 men with the disease, six tested positive for coronaviru­s in their semen. Photograph: Alissa Eckert/Centers for Disease Control/ AFP via Getty
Out of 38 men with the disease, six tested positive for coronaviru­s in their semen. Photograph: Alissa Eckert/Centers for Disease Control/ AFP via Getty

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