1.The making of a good male infertility microsurgeon: learning experience at Weill Cornell Medical College of Cornell University.
Fu-Jun ZHAO ; Jing PENG ; Philip S LI ; Richard LEE ; Marc GOLDSTEIN
National Journal of Andrology 2014;20(7):595-604
Male infertility microsurgery represents the fastest growing sub-specialty in urology and clinical andrology over the past two decades. The importance of microsurgery for male infertility has risen as a part of the urologist's armamentarium in the medical and surgical management of male infertility. Despite the advances in male infertility microsurgery in China, the lack of standardized and well-organized training programs for male infertility microsurgery remains a serious problem affecting its development. In this article, Zhao and Peng have shared their experience with the learning curve of male infertility microsurgery at the Center for Male Reproductive Medicine and Microsurgery, Weill Medical College of Cornell University, which centers on how to pay attention to the details and basic principles of microsurgery. Male infertility microsurgery is physically, technically and mentally challenging, and must be first learned in the laboratory. Clinical success depends heavily upon appropriate training in a microsurgical laboratory. Good training can significantly reduce operation time and surgical errors as well as improve the quality of outcomes.
Andrology
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education
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Humans
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Infertility, Male
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surgery
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Male
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Microsurgery
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education
2.Surgical Sperm Retrieval: Which Method to Use?
LI Shihua PHILIP ; Goldstein MARC ; N.SCHLEGEL PETER
National Journal of Andrology 2001;7(2):71-78
During the past 5~10 years, very few medical fields have changeddramatically as reproductive medicine, especially for the new treatment for the maleinfertility by the use of intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI) techniques andadvanced surgical epididymal and testicular sperm retrieval techniques. Those twomajor technical advances have completely changed the treatment for previouslyuntreatable testicular failure (non-obstructive azoospermia), ejaculatory failure orun-reconstructable obstructive azoospermia. Many men with even the most severe formsof infertility that are not amendable to specific medical and surgical treatmentscan now have chances to father biological children with only a few of theirspermatozoa. This review serves to discuss the various advanced sperm retrievaltechniques available for assisted reproduction, with specific focus on the technicalaspects and safety. Each technique has its specific medical indications, efficacies
3.Clinical studies of shang ring male circumcision in China and Africa.
Feng CHENG ; Nian-Qing LÜ ; Hao-Qin XU ; Mark A BARONE ; Richard LEE ; Marc GOLDSTEIN ; Philip S LI
National Journal of Andrology 2014;20(4):291-298
HIV/STIs remain a major global public health problem. One of the global strategies for the prevention and control of HIV/STIs is to interrupt their transmission, which requires the public health methods based on scientific evidence and cost-effectiveness. The scale-up of male circumcision services in the priority countries of the HIV-prevention project in sub-Saharan Africa has been hampered by the scarcity of trained providers and relative technical difficulty of male circumcision techniques recommended by WHO and UNAIDS. Shang Ring is an innovative and disposable device for male circumcision, which has been safely used for over 600 000 males in China since 2006. Clinical studies of more than 3 000 cases of Shang Ring circumcision in China, Kenya, Zambia, and Uganda have demonstrated its safety, effectiveness, acceptability and ease of use. The most obvious advantages of Shang Ring include short procedure time (3-6 min), excellent postoperative cosmesis, low rate of complications, high acceptance by clients and providers, ease of use, and standardization for reliable performance. As an innovative technique, Shang Ring has a great potential for facilitating the safe and effective scale-up of circumcision services. This article comprehensively reviews the clinical studies of Shang Ring male circumcision in China and Africa.
Africa
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China
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Circumcision, Male
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instrumentation
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methods
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HIV Infections
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prevention & control
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Humans
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Male
4.Microsurgical approaches to the treatment of obstructive azoospermia.
Philip S LI ; Qiang DONG ; Marc GOLDSTEIN
National Journal of Andrology 2004;10(9):643-650
In the past 5 to 10 years, very few fields in modern medicine have changed so dramatically as reproductive medicine, especially for the treatment of male infertility. Advances have been made in intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI), refined microsurgical reconstructive techniques (vasovasostomy and vasoepididymostomy), and microsurgical techniques of surgical sperm retrieval from the epididymis and testis. All men with epididymal obstruction (obstructive azoospermia) now have the opportunity to father their own biological children. In this article, the authors reviewed the most updated microsurgical vasovasostomy, vasoepididymostomy techniques and surgical indications as well as the key factors for successful microsurgical treatment. They also predicted the future directions and discussed the advantages of microsurgical techniques, emphasized the significant roles of microsurgical training for urological doctors to treat male infertility.
Epididymis
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surgery
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Fertilization in Vitro
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Humans
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Male
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Microsurgery
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Oligospermia
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surgery
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Sperm Injections, Intracytoplasmic
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Vasovasostomy
;
methods
5.Progress in the clinical studies of male circumcision using the Shang Ring.
Nian-qing LÜ ; Philip S LI ; David SOKAL ; Yue CHENG ; Yi-feng PENG ; Mark BARONE ; Yi-ran HUANG ; Marc GOLDSTEIN
National Journal of Andrology 2011;17(3):195-202
Male circumcision can reduce men's risk of HIV infection from heterosexual intercourse by 60% and is therefore recommended as an important strategy for HIV prevention in Africa by WHO and UNAIDS. However, rapid expansion of male circumcision efforts could be greatly facilitated by a safer, more effective and acceptable male circumcision surgical technique or device. Shang Ring is a simple technique developed in China. It allows a circumcision to be completed with minimal bleeding, without suturing, and in only 3-5 min and reported complications are few. A standardized adult male circumcision surgical protocol utilizing the Shang Ring device was developed in 2008 in China. Several surgical training courses using this protocol were successfully held in 2009 and 2010 in China. A recent pilot clinical study of the Shang Ring was conducted to evaluate its safety and efficiency in Kenya in 2009. The results and acceptability among study participants were excellent and confirmed many of the advantages seen in the earlier Chinese studies from Wuhu, Ningbo and Xi'an, suggesting that the Shang Ring is safe for further studies in Africa, thus, could facilitate more rapid roll-out of adult male circumcision through task shifting, surgical efficiencies and better acceptability. Further international investigations of the Shang Ring technique have now been planned for Kenya and Zambia in 2011. Moreover, adult male circumcision utilizing the Shang Ring device is now being considered as ope of the potential candidate techniques to be used in the scale-up of adult male circumcision services for HIV prevention in WHO priority countries in Africa. This review article summarizes Shang Ring related clinical studies, seminars and surgical workshops, publications and presentations conducted between February 2008 and December 2010 in China, the United States and Africa.
Africa
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Circumcision, Male
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instrumentation
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methods
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HIV Infections
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prevention & control
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Humans
;
Male
6.Changes in Semen Analysis over Time: A Temporal Trend Analysis of 20 Years of Subfertile Non-Azoospermic Men
Nahid PUNJANI ; Omar Al-Hussein ALAWAMLH ; Soo Jeong KIM ; Carolyn A. SALTER ; Gal WALD ; Miriam FELICIANO ; Nicholas WILLIAMS ; Vanessa DUDLEY ; Marc GOLDSTEIN
The World Journal of Men's Health 2023;41(2):382-389
Purpose:
To examine trends of population-level semen quality over a 20-year period.
Materials and Methods:
We performed a retrospective review of data from the andrology lab of a high volume tertiary hospital. All men with semen samples between 2000 and 2019 were included and men with azoospermia were excluded. Semen parameters were reported using the World Health Organization (WHO) 4th edition. The primary outcome of interest was changes in semen parameters over time. Generalized least squares (GLS) with restricted cubic splines were used to estimate average-monthly measurements, adjusting for age and abstinence period. Contrasts of the estimated averages based on GLS between the first and last months of collection were calculated.
Results:
A total of 8,990 semen samples from subfertile non-azoospermic men were included in our study. Semen volume decreased over time and estimate average at the beginning and end were statistically different (p<0.001). Similarly sperm morphology decreased over time, with a statistically significant difference between estimated averages from start to finish (p<0.001). Semen pH appeared to be increasing over time, but this difference was not significant over time (p=0.060). Sperm concentration and count displayed an increase around 2003 to 2005, but otherwise remained fairly constant over time (p=0.100 and p=0.054, respectively). Sperm motility appeared to decrease over time (p<0.001).
Conclusions
In a large sample of patients presenting to a single institution for fertility assessment, some aspects of semen quality declined across more than two decades. An understanding of the etiologies and driving forces of changing semen parameters over time is warranted.
7.Long-term benefit of male circumcision to the reduction of urinary tract infections and genitourinary cancers in China.
Fu-jun ZHAO ; Philip S LI ; Nian-qing LÜ ; Richard LEE ; Yi-feng PENG ; Feng CHENG ; Zheng LI ; Hao-qin XU ; Mark BARONE ; Marc GOLDSTEIN ; Shu-jia XIA
National Journal of Andrology 2014;20(11):969-977
Increasingly accumulated results from randomized controlled trials and other clinical studies have demonstrated that male circumcision reduces the risks of acquisition and transmission of HIV, HPV, HSV-2, and other sexually transmitted infections, and thus has a potential role in preventing cervical cancer, penile cancer and prostate cancer. The prevalence of male circumcision in China is currently less than 5%. The clinical evaluation studies and randomized controlled trials of the Shang Ring device showed excellent safety profiles, extremely high acceptability, and satisfaction among the participants and service providers in Africa and China. Given the recent recommendations by the World Health Organization and the Joint United Nations Program on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS), voluntary medical male circumcision should be promoted in China at the national level as an important alternative intervention to reduce reproductive tract infections and prevent both males and females from reproductive tract cancers. More emphasis is required on the studies of the long-term health benefits of male circumcision in uro-andrology.
China
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Circumcision, Male
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Female
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HIV Infections
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prevention & control
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Humans
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Male
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Penile Neoplasms
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prevention & control
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Prevalence
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Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic
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Sexually Transmitted Diseases
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prevention & control
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Urinary Tract Infections
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prevention & control
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Uterine Cervical Neoplasms
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prevention & control
;
World Health Organization
8.Simplifying the ShangRing technique for circumcision in boys and men: use of the no-flip technique with randomization to removal at 7 days versus spontaneous detachment.
Mark A BARONE ; Philip S LI ; Richard K LEE ; Daniel OUMA ; Millicent OUNDO ; Mukhaye BARASA ; Jairus OKETCH ; Patrick OTIENDE ; Nixon NYANGWESO ; Mary MAINA ; Nicholas KISWI ; Betty CHIRCHIR ; Marc GOLDSTEIN ; Quentin D AWORI
Asian Journal of Andrology 2019;21(4):324-331
To assess safety of the no-flip ShangRing male circumcision technique and to determine clinical course and safety of spontaneous detachment (i.e., allowing the device to fall off), we conducted a case series of no-flip ShangRing circumcision combined with a randomized controlled trial of removal 7 days postcircumcision versus spontaneous detachment at two health facilities in Kenya. The primary outcome was the safety of the no-flip technique based on moderate and severe adverse events (AEs) during the procedure and through 42-day follow-up. A main secondary outcome was clinical course and safety of spontaneous detachment. Two hundred and thirty males 10 years and older underwent no-flip circumcision; 114 randomized to 7-day removal and 116 to spontaneous detachment. All circumcisions were successfully completed. Overall 5.3% (6/114) of participants in the 7-day group and 1.7% (2/116) in the spontaneous group had an AE; with no differences when compared to the 3% AE rate in historical data from African studies using the original flip technique (P = 0.07 and P = 0.79, respectively). Overall 72.4% (84/116) of participants in the spontaneous group wore the ShangRing until it detached. Among the remaining (27.6%; 32/116), the ring was removed, primarily at the participants' request, due to pain or discomfort. There was no difference in AE rates (P = 0.169), visit day declared healed (P = 0.324), or satisfaction (P = 0.371) between randomization groups. The median time to detachment was 14.0 (IQR: 7-21, range: 5-35) days. The no-flip technique and spontaneous detachment are safe, effective, and acceptable to boys and men 10 years and older. Phimosis and penile adhesions do not limit successful ShangRing circumcision with the no-flip technique.
Adolescent
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Adult
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Child
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Circumcision, Male/methods*
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Humans
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Kenya
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Male
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Middle Aged
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Patient Satisfaction
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Treatment Outcome
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Wound Healing
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Young Adult