R. Wainer et al., PROSPECTIVE RANDOMIZED COMPARISON OF INTRAUTERINE AND INTRACERVICAL INSEMINATION WITH DONOR SPERMATOZOA, Human reproduction, 10(11), 1995, pp. 2919-2922
From March 1990 to September 1993, 20 women underwent a total of 89 cy
cles of intracervical inseminations with donor semen (ICI) and 23 wome
n underwent 67 cycles of intrauterine inseminations with donor semen (
IUI). The women were assigned to the two groups randomly, but ensuring
that the ages of the women and pathologies of the male partner (azoos
permia or severe oligozoospermia) were similar in the two groups, Ther
e was no significant difference between the characteristics of the two
groups and the method used to induce ovulation (HMG/HCG) was identica
l, Two semen straws were used for each insemination cycle. Semen was p
repared for IUI on a Percoll gradient. Thirteen clinical pregnancies w
ere obtained in the IUI group (19.4% of the attempts) and six in the I
CI group (6.75%). After six cycles of insemination, 75.4% of the women
of the IUI group obtained a pregnancy, as compared to 35% in the ICI
group, These good results may be due to the method of induction of ovu
lation, but also to the technique itself, increasing the number of mot
ile spermatozoa at the site of fertilization, The time taken to obtain
a pregnancy is thus shorter with IUI than with ICI, and the number of
semen straws required is smaller, In-vitro fertilization (IVF) should
be proposed after six failures by IUI.