Talk of semen and sperm is anything but a giggling business for the
more than 45 million couples worldwide dealing with infertility—and more
than 40 percent of those cases involve male infertility. To help such
couples, Harvard medical researchers have developed a smartphone
attachment that could enable easy and inexpensive home fertility tests
for men.
The new device, which resembles a chunky smartphone charging case or
cradle, has a slot for a disposable microchip slide containing the semen
sample. That enables men to quickly load up a sample and get back
results from a custom smartphone app within five seconds. The low cost
and convenience could prove revolutionary for many couples who otherwise
must rely on pricey and time-consuming lab tests to get the most
accurate fertility test results—an option that is often out of reach for
many low-income families in both industrialized and developing
countries.
“This can make home fertility testing for men as simple as home pregnancy testing for women,” says Hadi Shafiee, an assistant professor in medicine at Brigham and Women's Hospital, Harvard Medical School.
Testing of 350 patient semen samples—including both fresh and
cryopreserved samples—showed how the new smartphone device can detect
abnormal semen samples with almost 98 percent accuracy. It judges semen
based on two of three key indicators used by the World Health
Organization: sperm count per milliliter of fluid, or concentration; and
how many sperm are moving, known as motility. (The third, unused
indicator, how many sperm have normal shapes, is referred to as
morphology.) Additional details appear in the 22 March 2017 online issue
of the journal Science Translational Medicine.
Home use seems pretty easy. Once a man has, um, downloaded his DNA
package into a small cup, he simply dips the end of the microchip slide
into the cup, and squeezes a small rubber bulb on the slide in order to
draw the sperm sample up into the microchip. The contaminated disposable
tip of the slide snaps off easily so that the microchip sample can be
loaded into the slot on the smartphone attachment.
The smartphone attachment is made from materials costing just $4.45
total. These include: a 3D-printed case with a white LED to provide
lighting, two extra lenses to boost the optical power of the
smartphone's existing camera, a low-cost battery and some electronics
plus wiring. Initial tests used Moto X, Moto G4, and LG G4 handsets, but
slight device modifications could probably allow it to accommodate most
phones.
The easy-to-use smartphone app relies upon proprietary software
algorithms to count individual sperm and detect their movements. The
app's analysis of each sample takes less than five seconds and runs
entirely on the smartphone hardware, which means it does not need to
spend time sending the data to a more powerful laptop computer or to
cloud computing resources.
“It was challenging for us from a software perspective to do the
whole analysis on the phone and to measure both motility and total sperm
count in a very rapid manner,” Shafiee says.
The Harvard researchers hope to improve the software so that it can
eventually detect abnormal sperm shapes and disregard similar-size cells
in the semen sample. Shafiee declined at this time to comment on
whether the software relies on popular and powerful machine learning
techniques. (His only comment on that subject came during a marathon
session of back-to-back phone interviews: “You're the first reporter to
talk about that.”)
Shafiee emphasized that the new smartphone-based test could fill a
“gap” that exists in terms of home fertility tests for men. Products
such as FertilMARQ and SpermCheck use a chemical staining approach.
Trak, another product approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration
(FDA), uses a small spinning centrifuge to measure sperm concentration
in a microfluidic device. But all these products only measure sperm
concentration, whereas the Harvard device can also measure motility.
Perhaps the closest competitor for the Harvard smartphone device is the YO Home Sperm Test
developed by Medical Electronic Systems. The $49.95 home testing kit
became available for purchase in early 2017 and is marketed as “the
first FDA-cleared Smartphone based solution for testing your motile
sperm.”
But Shafiee seemed skeptical of Medical Electronic Systems’ test
after looking at the documentation filed with the FDA. He pointed out
that the YO test relies on a new measure called “motile sperm
concentration” that describes a “normal” cutoff point of 6 million
motile sperm per milliliter. By comparison, WHO standards measure normal
motility as having greater than 40 percent motile sperm in each semen
sample. That leaves open the possibility that the YO test could rate
certain samples as “normal” that would be considered abnormal under WHO
standards.
“Imagine a sample with 100 million sperm per ml and the motility is
10 percent,” Shafiee explains. “Based on clinical practice and WHO
guidelines, this is abnormal because it falls below 40 percent on
motility—but YO would identify it as healthy.”
The YO test’s accuracy was also mainly compared with that of another
proprietary Medical Electronic Systems lab test that relies upon the
same, somewhat questionable “motile sperm concentration” measure. The
Harvard team compared its smartphone device’s results with the current
standard methods used to diagnose male infertility: manual
microscope-based testing, and computer-assisted semen analysis (CASA).
And last but not least, Shafiee also pointed out that the Harvard team's
research has just been published in a peer-reviewed journal.
There may be plenty of market opportunities for the Harvard device in
any case. Besides couples dealing with infertility, there are more than
33 million couples with male partners who underwent vasectomy as a form
of contraception. Vasectomy procedures in the U.S. number between
175,000 and 550,000 procedures per year. The Harvard smartphone device
or similar devices could help such men regularly check their semen
samples to make sure that their vasectomy holds up—a follow-up practice
that is highly recommended but often ignored because of the
inconvenience of current testing methods.
Animal breeders might even benefit from a similar form of
smartphone-based testing kit that lets them perform fertility tests for
livestock on the spot instead of waiting on time-consuming transfers to
equipped labs. But “considering the differences between human semen and
animal semen in terms of sperm concentration, motility, and sample
volume, the current version of the smartphone-based semen analyzer would
need to be augmented for applications in animal breeding,” say the
Harvard researchers. In other words, we're going to need a bigger
sampling device.
Fonte: http://spectrum.ieee.org/the-human-os/biomedical/devices/smartphone-test-male-fertility
Comentário do Bloguista: 45
milhões de casais em todo o mundo lidam com casos de infertilidade e
mais de 40 por cento desses casos envolvem infertilidade masculina.
O baixo custo e a conveniência revelam-se revolucionários para muitos casais que normalmente recorrem a exames
laboratoriais caros e demorados para terem acesso aos resultados de
testes da fertilidade - uma opção que é frequentemente fora do alcance
para muitas famílias.
A utilização deste método é
bastante simples. O utilizador apenas tem de mergulhar a extremidade do
microchip num copo contendo uma pequena amostra de sémen.
O
anexo do smartphone é feito de materiais que custam apenas 4,12€ no
total. Este dispositivo consiste uma estrutura impressa em 3D com um
díodo emissor de luz branca para fornecer a iluminação, duas lentes
extra para impulsionar a potência ótica da camara existente no
smartphone e uma bateria low-cost. Os primeiros teste foram feitos com
os smartphones Moto X, Moto G4 e LG G4, mas pequenas modificações no
dispositivo provavelmente permitirão a compatibilidade com a maioria dos
smartphones.
A constante investigação da aplicação
das novas tecnologias na saúde, tem permitido um diagnóstico mais fácil e
mais rápido para os seus utilizadores. Cabe-nos a nós Biomédicos
continuar a procurar as lacunas no nosso quotidiano para podermos
proporcionar à comunidade cada vez mais e melhores dispositivos de
saúde, tanto a nível de diagnóstico como também terapêutico.

The creation of this blog came from a challenge posed to Masters students of Biomedical Sciences of the University of Beira Interior, Covilhã (Portugal), by Professor Doctor José Eduardo Cavaco within the course "Project in Biomedical Sciences''.
The Biomedical Sciences combine the areas of Biology, Biochemistry, Physics, Management and Engineering, stimulating the capacity for self learning, critical thinking and adaptation to new technologies.
Thus, the Biomedics integration in different areas of the national and international job market is possible as technical supporters in clinical environment, consulting, industry, education and research.
For more information: http://www.ubi.pt/Curso/907.
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