In order to understand if the number of sperm present is sufficient, one of the first things that a fertility specialist will want to do is a sperm count. The process for undertaking the count is not complex, but there are other barriers that prevent men from being evaluated in this manner, some of which are related to access and others which are more closely related to social stigma and personal feelings of shame or embarrassment. As a result, a team of researchers from Brigham and Women’s Hospital (BWH) and Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH) decided to pursue the idea of creating an at home diagnostic for men that would analyze semen and indicate whether the count was abnormal. As Dr. Hadi Shafiee, of the Division of Engineering in Medicine and Renal Division of Medicine at BWH, explained:
“We wanted to come up with a solution to make male infertility testing as simple and affordable as home pregnancy tests. Men have to provide semen samples in these rooms at a hospital, a situation in which they often experience stress, embarrassment, pessimism and disappointment. Current clinical tests are lab-based, time-consuming and subjective. This test is low-cost, quantitative, highly accurate and can analyze a video of an undiluted, unwashed semen sample in less than five seconds.”
The results of the research, undertaken on 350 clinical semen specimens from the MGH fertility center, has been published in the March 22 issue of Science Translational Medicine. ‘An automated smartphone-based diagnostic assay for point-of-care semen analysis‘ was authored by Manoj Kumar Kanakasabapathy, Magesh Sadasivam, Anupriya Singh, Collin Preston, Prudhvi Thirumalaraju, Maanasa Venkataraman, Charles L. Bormann, Mohamed Shehata Draz, John C. Petrozza and Hadi Shafiee.
As co-author of the study and Director of MGH’s Fertility Center Dr. John Petrozza stated:
“The ability to bring point-of-care sperm testing to the consumer, or health facilities with limited resources, is a true game changer. More than 40 percent of infertile couples have difficulty conceiving due to sperm abnormalities and this development will provide faster and improved access to fertility care. By working with Dr. Shafiee and his lab at BWH, and utilizing our clinical fertility expertise here at MGH, we have really been able to create a product that will benefit a lot of people.”
The reliance on 3D printing to create these devices helps keep the cost low and truly make them accessible in a very practical way. The ability to create these tests on demand in areas where access to medicine might be restricted means that there are no transportation costs or storage needs, thereby creating a much wider set of beneficiaries to their development as 3D printing and smartphones come together in another diagnostic application. All the healthcare in the world doesn’t do any good if there is no access and this is yet another way in which 3D printing has contributed to opening up access and advancing human health. Discuss in the Infertility forum at 3DPB.com.
[Source: BWH]