2013
DOI: 10.1007/s10815-013-9998-9
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Live births from frozen human semen stored for 40 years

Abstract: Capsule Healthy twin girls were born from IVF using frozen semen stored for approximately 40 years.

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Cited by 48 publications
(24 citation statements)
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“…Young men choosing to freeze sperm samples to be used, even up to 40 years later (101), might lower their personal risk of having a child carrying a de novo RAMP mutation as well as any other de novo mutations leading to disorders that exhibit the paternal age effect. However, the societal impact of such a strategy will be less significant (at least for the present), since despite the higher risk for older fathers most children are born to younger fathers, and thus the majority of cases for these disorders are the offspring of younger men.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Young men choosing to freeze sperm samples to be used, even up to 40 years later (101), might lower their personal risk of having a child carrying a de novo RAMP mutation as well as any other de novo mutations leading to disorders that exhibit the paternal age effect. However, the societal impact of such a strategy will be less significant (at least for the present), since despite the higher risk for older fathers most children are born to younger fathers, and thus the majority of cases for these disorders are the offspring of younger men.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A sample obtained prior to vasectomy and cryostored for 28 years resulted in a successful birth following intra uterine insemination [5]. Also, a sample obtained from an individual and cryostored for 40 years resulted in birth of twins following IVF-ET with ICSI [6]. But the long term effect on fertility of compromised semen quality of cancer patients, especially if they were cryopreserved during, as in this case report or soon after treatment needs to be confirmed with many more studies.…”
Section: Short Communicationmentioning
confidence: 73%
“…Equally, the perceived high cost of cryopreservation and storage might have a role to play, even though robust cost-benefit analyses have shown sperm cryopreservation to be more cost-effective than post-therapeutic fertility management [19]. It has been evidenced that long-time storage does not seem to affect the fertilisation potential of sperm, as recently reported after 40 years of storage [24].…”
Section: Particular Considerations Regarding the Cryopreservation Of mentioning
confidence: 98%