Cooper Et Al Hru

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...........................................................................................................................

World Health Organization reference


values for human semen
characteristics
*

Trevor G. Cooper
1,10
, Elizabeth Noonan
2
, Sigrid von Eckardstein
3
,
Jacques Auger
4
, H.W. Gordon Baker
5
, Hermann M. Behre
6
,
Trine B. Haugen
7
, Thinus Kruger
8
, Christina Wang
9
,
Michael T. Mbizvo
3,
, and Kirsten M. Vogelsong
3,
1
Centre of Reproductive Medicine and Andrology of the University, Domagkstrasse 11, D-48129 Munster, Germany
2
Fred Hutchinson
Cancer Research Center, SCHARP Statistical Center for HIV/AIDS Research and Prevention, Seattle, WA, USA
3
UNDP/UNFPA/WHO/
World Bank Special Programme of Research, Development and Research Training in Human Reproduction (HRP), Department of
Reproductive Health and Research, WHO, CH-1211 Geneva 27, Switzerland
4
Service dHistologie-Embryologie, Biologie de la
Reproduction/CECOS, Pavillon Cassini, Ho pital Cochin, Paris, France
5
Department of Obstetrics and Gynaecology, University of
Melbourne, Royal Womens Hospital, Carlton, VIC, Australia
6
Center for Reproductive Medicine and Andrology, University Hospital Halle,
Martin Luther University, Halle, Germany
7
Faculty of Health Sciences, Oslo University College, Oslo, Norway
8
Reproductive Biology Unit,
Stellenbosch University, Tygerberg, South Africa
9
Harbor-UCLA Medical Center and Los Angeles Biomedical Research Institute,
Torrance, CA, USA
10
Correspondence address. Tel: 49-251-835-6449; Fax: 49-251-835-6093; E-mail: [email protected]
table of contents
Introduction
Materials and Methods
Study populations
Analytical methods and quality control
Identication of data and handling of the datasets
Statistical analysis
Results
Ages of men providing semen samples
Reference values for human semen
Statistical differences in semen characteristics among the various populations
Discussion
Choice of reference limits
Comparison of the current with published reference limits
Comparisons of semen characteristics among different populations of men
Signicance of lower reference limits
Limitations of the current reference values
background: Semen quality is taken as a surrogate measure of male fecundity in clinical andrology, male fertility, reproductive toxi-
cology, epidemiology and pregnancy risk assessments. Reference intervals for values of semen parameters from a fertile population could
provide data from which prognosis of fertility or diagnosis of infertility can be extrapolated.
*Dedicated to the memory of Professor GMH Waites (19282005).

The list of authors who contributed data to this study is given in the Appendix.

These authors (M.T.M., K.M.V.) are staff members of the World Health Organization. The authors alone are responsible for the views expressed in this publication; these views do not
necessarily represent the decisions or policies of the World Health Organization.
& World Health Organization [2009]. All rights reserved. The World Health Oragnization has granted Oxford University Press permission for the reproduction of this article.
Human Reproduction Update, Vol.16, No.3 pp. 231245, 2010
Advanced Access publication on November 24, 2009 doi:10.1093/humupd/dmp048

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methods: Semen samples from over 4500 men in 14 countries on four continents were obtained from retrospective and prospective
analyses on fertile men, men of unknown fertility status and men selected as normozoospermic. Men whose partners had a time-to-
pregnancy (TTP) of 12 months were chosen as individuals to provide reference distributions for semen parameters. Distributions were
also generated for a population assumed to represent the general population.
results: The following one-sided lower reference limits, the fth centiles (with 95th percent condence intervals), were generated from
men whose partners had TTP 12 months: semen volume, 1.5 ml (1.41.7); total sperm number, 39 million per ejaculate (3346); sperm
concentration, 15 million per ml (1216); vitality, 58% live (5563); progressive motility, 32% (3134); total (progressive non-
progressive) motility, 40% (3842); morphologically normal forms, 4.0% (3.04.0). Semen quality of the reference population was superior
to that of the men from the general population and normozoospermic men.
conclusions: The data represent sound reference distributions of semen characteristics of fertile men in a number of countries. They
provide an appropriate tool in conjunction with clinical data to evaluate a patients semen quality and prospects for fertility.
Key words: human semen / reference values / infertility diagnosis / fertile men
Introduction
The WHO manual for the examination of human semen and
sperm[semen]-cervical mucus interaction (WHO, 1987, 1992, 1999)
is widely used as a source of standard methodology for laboratories
engaged in semen analyses. However, the interpretation and appli-
cation of previous WHO normal or reference values for semen par-
ameters used thus far have limitations, since the data were derived
from imprecisely dened reference populations and obtained from
laboratories with unknown comparability with respect to analytical
methodologies. These values were limited by the lack of available
data on semen variables in recent fathers, and did not dene true
reference ranges or limits. There has been no consensus around the
suitability of these values, as some centres consider the cited values
for characteristics of sperm concentration, morphology and motility
too high, whereas others consider them too low.
If too high, a high percentage of fertile men would be classied as
subnormal, especially when morphology, sperm concentration or
motility is considered (Barratt et al., 1988; Chia et al., 1998; Nallella
et al., 2006; Pasqualotto et al., 2006; Gao et al., 2007, 2008).
Healthy men may also be investigated for infertility, or inappropriately
treated by Assisted Reproduction Technologies, as a result of their
lower semen quality if reference limits are too high (Bostofte et al.,
1983; Lemcke et al., 1997).
On the other hand, a sperm concentration of 20 10
6
/ml, the
normal or reference value cited by WHO (1987, 1992, 1999),
has been considered too low for a lower reference limit because
the probability of pregnancy is essentially linear with sperm concen-
trations up to 4050 10
6
/ml (Bonde et al., 1998; Slama et al.,
2002). Conversely, sperm concentrations above this value are repeat-
edly observed in infertile patients (Nallella et al., 2006). There may be
no upper limit of any semen characteristics since pregnancy rates
increase with superior sperm morphology and motility (Garrett
et al., 2003). The then-current normal morphology value of WHO
(1987) was considered inadequate by Check et al. (1992) as it did
not distinguish between fertile and infertile men whose partners
were healthy. With uncertain reference values, over- or under-
diagnosis may result. Although much of the investigation conducted
to date has considered the WHO normal or reference values as
cut-off limits separating fertile from infertile populations, doubts
have been raised about the validity of this approach (Bartoov et al.,
1993; Barratt et al., 1995).
This article considers which men are most suitable for providing a
reference population, presents data from such a population, mentions
the possible limitations of the results obtained and discusses how the
reference intervals could be interpreted as useful reference limits. The
present analysis benets from the availability and incorporation of
multi-country data from recent fathers with known time-to-pregnancy
(TTP). The development and application of clear reference ranges
should help reduce the incidence of misdiagnosis of fertility problems
and improve clinical care.
Individuals considered suitable for providing reference semen values
have included unselected populations, that is, men of unproven fertility
(Irvine et al., 1996; Paulsen et al., 1996; Lemcke et al., 1997; Junqing
et al. 2002); men from couples presenting with infertility (MacLeod
and Wang, 1979; Bostofte et al., 1983; Berling and Wolner-Hanssen,
1997; Andolz et al., 1999); candidates for semen donation, some
proven fertile (Leto and Frensilli, 1981; Auger et al., 1995; Bujan
et al., 1996; Van Waeleghem et al., 1996) and men presenting for
vasectomy (Sultan Sheriff, 1983; Fisch et al., 1996). Whereas the
rst group may be considered drawn from the general population,
semen donors may be, and vasectomy candidates most probably
are, of proven fertility, although paternity may not have been recent
relative to provision of the semen sample analysed. The majority of
men have indenable fertility status at any one moment: therefore a
reference range comprising recently fertile men is dened by men
whose semen variables may not reect those of the general popu-
lation. This is unusual among clinical laboratory tests and clearly pre-
sents a major challenge in dening a valid population reference
range for human semen.
The present study examined semen quality in groups of men from
the general population (having unknown fertility status) as well as
fathers. For the investigation of male factor infertility, the most rel-
evant reference group is that of proven fertile men, since for valid
comparisons of patient data with the reference values, the patient
should sufciently resemble the reference individuals in all respects
other than those under investigation (PetitClerc and Solberg, 1987;
Solberg, 1987), in this case fertility. The selection criteria determining
232 Cooper et al.

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which individuals are included in the reference population would
ideally include proof of paternity, but this is rarely requested or
obtained.
Where semen samples are sought from fertile men, approaching
the pregnant woman is likely to lead to the identication of the true
biological father; but whether he provides a sample may depend on
his cultural and social background, as well as his doubts about pater-
nity, biasing the study population unpredictably. Several prospective
cross-sectional studies have established baseline values of human
semen quality from standardized methodology in relation to fertility
(Zinaman et al., 2000; Auger et al., 2001; Jrgensen et al., 2001;
Swan, 2003; Eustache et al., 2004; Slama et al., 2004; Haugen et al.,
2006; Iwamoto et al., 2006; Pal et al., 2006; Stewart et al., 2009).
To avoid the collection bias associated with selecting fertile men,
obtaining whole population data has been suggested as ideal. Although
theoretically attractive, this is practically unachievable owing to the
potentially embarrassing or personal nature of reproductive studies
per se (Handelsman et al., 1985), the attitudes of those seeking care
(Tielemans et al., 2002) and self-selection of those who are willing
to participate (Handelsman, 1997).
The increasing acceptance of WHO standard methodology for
semen analysis by laboratories performing clinical studies worldwide
means that reference distributions can be generated from a combined
analysis of these data. This article presents semen characteristics of,
and provides reference intervals and limits generated from, a popu-
lation of men who had fathered a child within 1 year of trying to
induce a pregnancy. The 95% reference intervals for a range of
semen variables and the lower (2.5th centile and 5th centile) reference
limits, have been generated, in line with clinical chemistry standards.
Data from populations of fathers with unknown TTP and men with
unknown fertility status are also presented, to indicate that ranges
may be different for men with untested fertility examined for other
purposes such as male contraception studies, or recruited from the
general population. The present analyses were performed on behalf
of, and with nancial and technical support from, WHO; the data
are to be included in the forthcoming fth edition of the WHO lab-
oratory manual for the examination and processing of human semen.
Materials and Methods
Study populations
Reference values can be subject-based (sequential samples from single indi-
viduals) or population-based (single samples from a group of usually healthy
donors) (PetitClerc and Solberg, 1987; Solberg, 1987). In this study, data
from a population of fertile men were analysed. The men were hetero-
geneous for denitions of fertility, having a currently or formerly pregnant
partner with known TTP up to and including 12 months. This is a population
of fertile men from partnerships of high or normal fecundity Fathers with
TTP 12 months. Data from 1953 semen samples from ve studies in
eight countries on three continents were combined and analysed (Table I
for location of laboratories and methods used).
TTP is a well-known and standardized epidemiological index (Joffe,
2000), dened as the number of months (or cycles) from stopping contra-
ception to achieving a pregnancy and was reported in the publications of
the original prospective and retrospective studies cited here. The subset of
fertile men with TTP 12 months was selected to provide reference
values for human semen, since infertility is currently dened as a failure
to conceive after at least 12 months of unprotected intercourse (Rowe
et al., 1993, 2000).
Semen data from three other groups of men were examined for
comparison:
(i) unscreened men were men from the general population or young
healthy men applying to donate samples for trials of hormonal contra-
ception. This is a mixed population of men of unknown fertility,
assumed to be representative of the general population. Data from
965 semen samples from seven studies in ve countries on three con-
tinents were combined and analysed (Table I).
(ii) screened men were those whose samples satised the then-current
WHO criteria for normozoospermia. This is a mixed population of
men with unknown fertility history, being either volunteers who
were screened prior to participation in male contraceptive trials or
men attending infertility clinics. Data are presented to reveal any
effects of pre-selection of samples and to represent the population
that conformed to previous normal or reference values. A total
of 934 data points from four studies in four countries on three con-
tinents and from two multinational WHO studies (WHO, 1990,
1996; Table I) were combined and analysed.
(iii) fertile men with unknown TTP were those whose partners gave
birth prior to the provision of the semen sample, but with no
reported TTP. This is a population of fertile men with partnerships
of probably all ranges of fecundity: high, normal, moderately or
severely impaired. A total of 817 data points from two studies in
two countries on two continents and from two multinational
WHO studies (WHO, 1990, 1996; Table I) were combined and
analysed.
Analytical methods and quality control
For results to be acceptable as reference values, the conditions under
which the samples were obtained and processed for analysis should be
known and laboratory results should be produced using adequately
standardized methods under sufcient quality control (Solberg, 2004).
All laboratories generating the data analysed here used standardized
methods for semen analysis, i.e. procedures in the edition of the WHO
manual for the examination of human semen and sperm[semen]-cervical
mucus interaction current at the time of the original studies (WHO,
1987, 1992, 1999). The various editions of the manual provided similar
methods for assessing sperm concentration, motility and morphology
but provided different criteria for categorising morphology. As the
manual provides a choice of methods for measuring semen volume, count-
ing spermatozoa and staining morphology slides, the actual methods used
by each laboratory are listed in Table I.
No external quality control (EQC) for semen analysis was available for
the early studies included here, but most of the later studies were done by
laboratories employing both internal and EQC according to accepted prac-
tices. Data that were combined to calculate the reference distributions
were provided by laboratories that practiced rigorous internal quality
control (IQC) and EQC.
Identication of data and handling of the
datasets
As semen analysis is difcult to perform by general clinical laboratories,
and formal quality control has only recently been introduced into androl-
ogy laboratories (Cooper et al., 1999, 2002), data were obtained from lab-
oratories that were known to provide assessments according to
standardized methodologies. A systematic review of the literature was
not performed to identify all data on semen quality in various populations.
Laboratories and data were identied through the known literature and
WHO reference values for human semen 233

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.............................................................................................................................................................................................
Table I Location of and methods used by laboratories providing data for this study
Category
1
City, Country,
Continent
2
N
3
Semen
Volume
4
Sperm
Concentration
5
Sperm
Motility
6
Sperm
Morphology
7
Reference
Unscreened Sydney, Australia, AU 225 S N 37 Q Turner et al. (2003)
Unscreened Melbourne, Australia, AU 41 C N RT S
8
WHO (1996), McLachlan
et al. (2000)
Unscreened Edinburgh, UK, EU 84 W N 37 D Brady et al. (2004, 2006),
Hay et al. (2005), Walton
et al. (2007)
Unscreened Manchester, UK, EU 24 P N 37 P
8
Unpublished results
Unscreened Los Angeles, USA, AM 332 P N 37 P
8
Gonzalo et al. (2002),
Qoubaitary et al. (2006),
Wang et al. (2006)
Unscreened Santiago, Chile, AM 60 P,S M,N 37 P von Eckardstein et al.
(2003), Unpublished
results
Unscreened Munster, Germany, EU 199 GC N 37 P Buchter et al. (1999),
Kamischke et al. (2000a, b,
2001a, b, 2002),
Unpublished results
Fathers TTP Melbourne, Australia, AU 206 C N RT S
8
Stewart et al. (2009)
Fathers TTP Paris, France; Turku,
Finland; Copenhagen,
Denmark; Edinburgh,
Scotland, EU
900 W N,B,T,Ma 37 S
8
Auger et al. (2001),
Jrgensen et al. (2001),
Slama et al. (2002)
Fathers TTP Columbia, USA, AM 593 W N 37 P
8
Swan et al. (2003)
Fathers TTP Oslo, Norway, EU 89 W N 37 P
8
Haugen et al. (2006)
Fathers TTP Copenhagen, Denmark,
EU
165 C M,B,T 37 P Bonde et al. (1998), Jensen
et al. (2001)
Fathers no TTP Davis, USA, AM 606 P Mi 37 P
8
Guzick et al. (2001)
Fathers no TTP Munster,
Germany, EU
58 GC N 37 P Kamischke et al. (2001a),
Unpublished result
scrno
TTP
Stockholm, Sweden, EU 37 23 W N 37 P WHO (1990, 1996)
scrno
TTP
Szeged, Hungary, EU 11 5 GC M RT P WHO (1996)
scrno
TTP
Singapore, AS 3 1 P M RT EN WHO (1996)
scrno
TTP
Sydney, Australia, AU 61 23 S N 37 Q WHO (1990, 1996)
scrno
TTP
Melbourne, Australia, AU 45 18 W N RT S WHO (1990, 1996)
scrno
TTP
Turku, Finland, EU 21 7 C B 37 H WHO (1990)
scrno
TTP
Edinburgh, UK, EU 60 15 P N 37 P WHO (1990, 1996)
scrno
TTP
Manchester, UK, EU 22 5 P N 37 P WHO (1996)
scrno
TTP
Bicetre, France, EU 11 4 P B 37 S WHO (1990, 1996)
scrno
TTP
Los Angeles, USA, AM 16 5 S N RT B WHO (1996)
scrno
TTP
Beijing, China, AS 56 2 P N RT P WHO (1990, 1996)
scrno
TTP
Nanjing, China, AS 56 6 P N RT P WHO (1990, 1996)
Continued
234 Cooper et al.

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personal communication with investigators and the editorial group of the
fth edition of the WHO laboratory manual for the examination and pro-
cessing of human semen (forthcoming). The data representing the refer-
ence population of fertile men were derived from all known and identied
prospective or retrospective studies designed with time to pregnancy as an
outcome and in which WHO-recommended methodologies for semen
analysis were employed. Data that were inadvertently omitted may be
of similar quality. Although acknowledging that there were differences in
results among centres, it was not possible to attribute this variability to
the known methodological differences, apart from morphology, or poss-
ible geographical differences of the study populations, or the different
size of the datasets. Data on ethnicity were not always available.
Datasets were provided by the centres responsible for generating them
or by WHO (Table I). The analysis was designed as an integrated analysis
combining primary data from various primary studies, which meets the
denition of an individual patient data meta-analysis. The data from individ-
ual semen donors were compiled and analysed. Where data have been
published, the relevant publications are marked with an asterisk in the
reference list. All data were supplied as Excel spreadsheets and hand-
checked for missing values and typographical errors before statistical analy-
sis. Data on semen volume, sperm concentration, total sperm number per
ejaculate, motility, vitality and normal morphology were included only if
they were generated from complete semen samples, obtained following
27 days of sexual abstinence. This range was used because this is the
interval recommended by WHO and it has thus become a standard prac-
tice. The relationship between abstinence time and semen analysis results
within this time frame is well-known.
Semen analysis results from only one sample per man (as recommended
by PetitClerc and Solberg, 1987; Solberg, 1987), the rst where several
were given, were included in the analyses, so as not to over-represent
certain men by averaging values. As a result, the variation observed is
likely to reect inter-individual variation. Sperm concentration was
measured by haemocytometer (mainly improved Neubauer, but some
laboratories used BurkerTurk or Malassez) on diluted and xed
samples. Only total motility (WHO grades a b c) and progressive
motility (WHO grades a b combined) were included, for more accuracy
and consistency in results (Cooper and Yeung, 2006).
Although all centres reported using WHO procedures, the rec-
ommended methodologies have changed over time, and many centres
have experienced difculties with the subjective assessments of mor-
phology. Data on normal sperm morphology were only included if
results were reported as determined according to the so-called strict
(Tygerberg) method (WHO, 1992, 1999). Data from four studies
(fathers TTP indicated in Table I) were combined to provide the reference
distribution for fertile men. To obviate among-centre differences, mor-
phology slides for the two multicentre studies (Auger et al., 2001; Swan
et al., 2003 and ongoing studies) were read centrally. The other two
studies were single-centre studies (Haugen et al., 2006; Stewart et al.,
2009). All four studies involved EQC for sperm morphology.
Sperm vitality data, assessed by the eosinnigrosin method in semen
from partners of pregnant women with TTP 12 months was obtained
from two centres, in France and Australia, but was not included as an end-
point in any studies of unscreened men reecting the general population.
Statistical analysis
Different paradigms used by statistical packages are known to inuence the
reference limits of human semen (Egeland and Haugen, 2007). In a prelimi-
nary analysis, SAS (SAS Institute, San Francisco, CA USA) was used to gen-
erate and compare the variance-weighted 2.5th and 5th centiles. For
statistical comparison of lower reference limits, the values were weighted
by letting b
i
be the fth centile estimate from study 1 and letting v
i
be the
estimated variance of b
i
. The pooled estimate of the fth centile (Poolb) is
b
1
=v
1
b
2
=v
2
=1=v
1
v
2
w
1
b
1
w
2
b
1
where
w
i
1=v
i
=1=v
1
1=v
2
. The estimate of the standard error
(Poolb) is w
2
1
v
1
w
2
2
v
2
. . .. The 95% condence intervals were calcu-
lated using the normal approximation, weighted 5th centile +(1.96
pooled standard error). The fth centile and variance of each study
were obtained by quantile regression. As the weighted values were not
fundamentally different from those obtained in a non-weighted analysis,
the nal analyses were performed on non-weighted raw data. Preliminary
analyses did not suggest signicant differences among centres, except in
the case of morphology assessments where variability among centres
could be attributed to differences in methodologies.
.............................................................................................................................................................................................
Table I Continued
Category
1
City, Country,
Continent
2
N
3
Semen
Volume
4
Sperm
Concentration
5
Sperm
Motility
6
Sperm
Morphology
7
Reference
scrno
TTP
Seattle, USA, AM 41 22 P N RT P WHO (1990, 1996)
scrno
TTP
Chengdu, China, AS 29 17 P N RT P WHO (1990, 1996)
Screened Melbourne, Australia, AU 84 P N 37 H
8
McLachlan et al. (2000,
2002)
Screened Manchester, UK, EU 29 P N 37 P
8
Unpublished results
Screened Bologna, Italy, EU 89 P N RT P
8
Meriggiola et al. (1996,
2003, 2005)
Screened Beijing, China, AS 263 C N RT P Gu et al. (2003)
1
TTP, time (12 to .12 months) to pregnancy; noTTP, no time to pregnancy recorded; scr, screened;
2
AU, Australasia; AM, Americas; EU, Europe; AS, Asia;
3
Number of samples
[where two values are recorded for WHO (1990, 1996) studies, they relate to populations of screened men and fathers, respectively (scrno TPP)];
4
GC, collected in graduated cylinder;
W, from weight (assuming density 1 g/ml); P, drawn into a pipette from the collection vessel; S, taken into a syringe from the collection vessel; C, transferred to a cylinder from the
collection vessel;
5
B, BurkerTurk chamber; M, Makler chamber; Ma, Malassez chamber; Mi, Microcell chamber (data from these chambers were not used in the analyses); N, Neubauer
chamber; T, Thoma chamber;
6
37, 378C; RT, room temperature;
7
Stains: B, BryanLeishman; D, DiffQuik; H, Haematoxylin and Eosin; P, Papanicolaou; Q, Quickdip; S, Shorr;
8
centres
providing normal sperm morphology data.
WHO reference values for human semen 235

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In this study, Stata Version 9 (Statacorp, College Station, TX, USA) was
used to generate the centiles of the raw data, and Sigma Stat (v3.5, SysStat
Software GmbH, Erkrath, Germany) was used to compare the datasets
from all the groups. As no transformation method produced Gaussian dis-
tributions of the data, non-parametric tests were used. Wilcoxons Rank
Sum Test was performed with multiple comparisons against the reference
population (fathers TTP 12 months); in Dunns post hoc test, P ,0.05
was considered signicant. For the fathers in partnerships with TPP 12
months, both the central 95% and one-sided 95% of the population-based
distribution are presented as potential reference intervals, i.e. the 2.5th
and 5.0th centiles are both provided as possible lower reference limits.
The 95% condence intervals of both lower reference limits are pre-
sented. Graphical presentation of primary data in the form of
box-and-whisker plots and histograms of the distributions of values are
provided (SigmaPlot, Version 10.0, SysStat Software).
Results
Ages of men providing semen samples
The age range of all of the men who provided samples was 1767
years, which covers the usual ages of men being investigated for infer-
tility or requiring contraception. The fathers with partners with TTP
12 months had a mean (+SD) age of 31+5 years (range 1853) and
only 10 men were over age 45 whereas the fertile men of unknown
TTP were of age 33+5 years (2052) and 12 were over 45. The
unscreened men were of age 33+7.8 years (1767) and 54 men
were over 45; the screened men (age 32+6 years; 1950) included
three men over 45 years. The data may not be representative of the
normal distributions in younger or older men.
Reference values for human semen
Men whose partners had a TTP 12 months were chosen as the
reference group from which the reference values for human semen
from fertile men were determined. The distribution of data for
various semen characteristics in this population is given in Table II.
For a conventional two-sided distribution, the 2.5th centile, which
constitutes the lower reference limit in most clinical laboratory tests,
could be proposed for the lower limit of semen characteristics; for
a one-sided distribution, the fth centile is the lower reference limit.
Both of these lower reference limits, and their 95% condence inter-
vals, are given in Table II. Table III presents the same data for men of
unknown fertility from the general population, for comparison. All par-
ameters were routinely measured according to standard method-
ologies, with the exception of total sperm number per ejaculate,
which is derived, for each individual semen sample, by multiplying
the sperm concentration by the volume of the whole ejaculate. This
relationship does not hold for the population-based centiles, as the
parameters of sperm concentration and semen volume are not corre-
lated in the population.
Statistical differences in semen
characteristics among the various
populations
Semen from fathers with partners TTP 12 months had signicantly
greater semen volume, sperm concentration and percentage of
normal forms than those of the other three groups, although the
percentages of all total motile and progressively motile spermatozoa
were signicantly lower in this group than in some others (Fig. 1).
Frequency histograms of semen volume, sperm concentration, total
sperm numbers per ejaculate, percentages of total and progressively
motile and of morphologically normal spermatozoa are presented in
Fig. 2 for the four populations. Despite the lower percentage of
progressively motile spermatozoa in fathers with TTP 12 months,
the larger semen volumes and total sperm numbers provided this
population with higher total numbers of progressively motile sperma-
tozoa than found in the screened and unscreened groups; the total
number of morphologically normal spermatozoa was also greater in
the reference population than in the other fathers and unscreened
groups (Table IV).
Discussion
Semen analysis is usually performed to help determine why a couple is
having difculty conceiving, to follow the course of a treatment affect-
ing testicular or accessory gland function, following vasectomy or in a
research context. Reference values for the composition for semen,
akin to those provided in clinical chemistry for blood values, would
be helpful in both clinical and research settings. The current work pre-
sents an assembly of human semen variables from the most plausible
reference group (fathers in partnerships with TTP 12 months) to
form normative human population data, obtained from laboratories
using standardized and controlled methods in eight countries on
three continents. The conventional statistically accepted 95% refer-
ence interval, and 2.5th and 5th centile lower reference limits from
two- and one-sided distributions, respectively, were calculated from
over 1900 semen samples for semen volume, sperm concentration,
total sperm numbers per ejaculate, sperm motility and sperm mor-
phology; fewer samples were analysed for vitality. In this study, the
standardized methods used will have minimized analytical error, so
the large range in values observed in each group of men likely reects
biological variation (Castilla et al., 2006). Despite the methodological
differences over time and among centres (see below), the values pre-
sented here are considered to represent global semen characteristics
of fertile men.
The men in the reference population are characterized by not only
larger semen volumes and higher concentrations and numbers of sper-
matozoa in their ejaculate, but also by a higher total number of motile
and morphologically normal cells per ejaculate than found in the other
groups.
Choice of reference limits
Clinical reference values are required for comparison with values
obtained from the patient being assessed, among other reasons.
The observed values are used to make a clinical decision by comparing
them with reference distributions and reference intervals (PetitClerc
and Solberg, 1987), in addition to a number of other bioclinical
aspects of both partners. Descriptive statistics of semen from fertile
and infertile men have included the mean and standard deviation,
although these are not appropriate for percentages or for concen-
trations, where transformation of the data is necessary before statisti-
cal analysis can be performed (Berman et al., 1996; Handelsman,
2002). Non-parametric descriptions of semen analysis data have
236 Cooper et al.

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included the median alone (MacLeod, 1950, 1951; MacLeod and Gold,
1951a, b; Page and Houlding, 1951; MacLeod and Wang, 1979; Wang
et al., 1985), together with the interquartile ranges (MacLeod and
Gold, 1951a, b; Chia et al., 1998; Nallella et al., 2006; Pal et al., 2006;
Pasqualotto et al., 2006), none intended to be a reference limit, and
the 15th centile, suggested as a reference limit in one case because
15% of men in the population were infertile (Junqing et al., 2002).
Where lower reference limits for semen variables from fertile men
have been proposed, there is surprisingly no agreement on which
value to take, and proposals have included the 10th centile (Rehan
et al., 1975; Jouannet et al., 1981; Menkveld et al., 2001; van der
Merwe et al., 2005), the 5th centile (MacLeod, 1951, Sultan Sheriff,
1983; Barratt et al., 1988; Jrgensen et al., 2001; Andersen et al.,
2002; Slama et al., 2002; Gao et al., 2007, 2008) and the 2.5th
centile (Cooper et al., 1991). In their studies, Rehan et al. (1975)
reported both the 16th and 10th centiles, Ombelet et al. (1997) the
10th and 5th centiles and Haugen et al. (2006) the 10th, 5th and
2.5th centiles. Other approaches taken to provide cut-off values dis-
tinguishing fertile from infertile men are classication and regression
(Guzick et al., 2001) and receiver operating characteristics (ROC)
curves (Ombelet et al., 1997; Gunalp et al., 2001; Menkveld et al.,
2001; Nallella et al., 2006).
In setting reference limits for clinical chemistry it is widely accepted
that 95% of the data should be included in the reference interval. For a
two-sided distribution, the 2.5th and 97.5th centiles of a reference dis-
tribution should form the lower and upper reference limits, respect-
ively (Dybkaer and Solberg, 1987; PetitClerc and Solberg, 1987;
Horn and Pesce, 2003; Solberg, 2004, 2006). However, the justica-
tion for setting the reference limits on the composition of blood is
not necessarily relevant to setting limits for semen. Most blood com-
ponents are well-regulated to prevent too high or too low concen-
trations reaching target tissues, so upper and lower reference limits
are necessary. In contrast, the composition of semen is not controlled
by strict feedback systems and is confounded by a variety of factors
including accessory gland emptying and previous sexual activity.
One-sided distributions are deemed appropriate when one side of
the distribution is clinically irrelevant (Horn and Pesce, 2003; Solberg,
2006). An analogous situation to that of semen analysis may be that
of urinary secretion of metabolites of styrene, hydroxypyrene or a-
naphthol. To determine the upper limits of excretion, 95% one-sided
........................
.............................................................................................................................................................................................
Table II Distribution of values, lower reference limits and their 95% CI for semen parameters from fertile men whose
partners had a time-to-pregnancy of 12 months or less
N Centiles
5 (95% CI) 10 25 50 75 90 95 97.5 2.5 (95% CI)
Semen volume (ml) 1941 1.2 (1.01.3) 1.5 (1.41.7) 2 2.7 3.7 4.8 6 6.8 7.6
Sperm concentration (10
6
/ml) 1859 9 (811) 15 (1216) 22 41 73 116 169 213 259
Total number (10
6
/Ejaculate) 1859 23 (1829) 39 (3346) 69 142 255 422 647 802 928
Total motility (PR NP, %)* 1781 34 (3337) 40 (3842) 45 53 61 69 75 78 81
Progressive motility (PR, %)* 1780 28 (2529) 32 (3134) 39 47 55 62 69 72 75
Normal forms (%) 1851 3 (2.03.0) 4 (3.04.0) 5.5 9 15 24.5 36 44 48
Vitality (%) 428 53 (4856) 58 (5563) 64 72 79 84 88 91 92
*PR, progressive motility (WHO, 1999 grades a b); NP, non-progressive motility (WHO, 1999 grade c).
The values are from unweighted raw data. For a two-sided distribution the 2.5th and 97.5th centiles provide the reference limits; for a one-sided distribution the fth centile provides the
lower reference limit.
........................
.............................................................................................................................................................................................
Table III Distribution of values, lower reference limits and their 95% CI for semen parameters from the general
population of unscreened men
N Centiles
5 (95% CI) 10 25 50 75 90 95 97.5 2.5 (95% CI)
Semen volume (ml) 929 0.8 (0.71.0) 1.2 (1.01.3) 1.6 2.2 3.2 4.2 5.5 6.4 7
Sperm concentration (10
6
/ml) 930 4 (16) 9 (611) 17 36 64 100 192 192 237
Total number (10
6
/Ejaculate) 928 11 (314) 20 (1429) 45 101 196 336 619 619 772
Total motility (PR NP, %)* 928 26 (1432) 36 (3239) 45 55 62 70 85 85 88
Progressive motility (PR, %)* 708 20 (727) 31 (2634) 39 49 57 65 78 78 81
Normal forms (%) 137 3.5 (2.04.5) 4.7 (3.85.5) 7 10.5 14 16 23.2 23.2 30
*PR, progressive motility (WHO, 1999 grades a b); NP, non-progressive motility (WHO, 1999 grade c).
The values are from unweighted raw data. For a two-sided distribution the 2.5th and 97.5th centiles provide the reference limits; for a one-sided distribution the fth centile provides the
lower reference limit.
WHO reference values for human semen 237

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upper reference limits are computed (Murer et al., 1994; Hansen et al.,
1995), since lower limits are irrelevant. One-sided limits are used for
neonatal serum thyroid stimulating hormone levels, where action is
taken only if values are too high (Koduah et al., 2004).
Thus one-sided lower reference limits may be appropriate for the
various semen parameters described here, since too high values
appear to be clinically irrelevant. Despite older reports that polyzoos-
permia (sperm concentration .250 10
6
/ml) is associated with
subfertility and increased spontaneous miscarriage rates, the nature
of the defect is unclear. Sperm penetration through cervical mucus
(Glezerman et al., 1982) and fusion with zona-free hamster oocytes
(Chan et al., 1986) are normal, although a lower sperm acrosin
content (Schill and Feifel, 1984) and lower acrosome reaction rates
than in controls (To pfer-Petersen et al., 1987) suggest defective
acrosomal function. One report indicates that there is no reason to
believe that high sperm numbers or percentages of progressively
motile or morphologically normal spermatozoa are harmful to fertility
(Tournaye et al., 1997).
Comparison of the current with published
reference limits
This analysis represents a sound empirical estimation of lower refer-
ence limits, together with their condence intervals, which prove
much wider than previously assumed. The combined data come
from various regions in the world where ethnic or other factors
may differ and inuence the distribution. Despite the use of an
elite population, the data nevertheless provide an appropriate and
Figure 1 Box and whisker plots of semen analysis data. Semen volume, sperm concentration, total sperm numbers per ejaculate, total percentage
motility, percentage progressive motility and percentage normal morphology from fathers with time-to-pregnancy 12 months (TTP ,12, black),
unscreened men from the general population (UNSCR, red), fathers with no known time-to-pregnancy (NoTTP, green) and screened men selected
for normozoospermia (SCR, yellow). The boxes represent the quartiles and the lines within them are the medians; the whiskers extend from the 10th
to the 90th centiles and the dots represent the 5th and 95th centiles. *signicantly different from fathers with TTP 12 months.
238 Cooper et al.

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relevant reference interval, with lower limits being suitable for use in
conjunction with clinical data to evaluate a patients semen quality
and prospects for fertility. Apart from total sperm number per ejacu-
late, the lower limits of these distributions are lower than the pre-
viously presented normal or reference values (WHO, 1987, 1992,
1999).
One of the earliest published assessments of sperm concentration
in human semen was by Macomber and Sanders (1929) who reported
a median of 100 million spermatozoa per millilitre, using blood
pipettes and an unidentied counting chamber. Systematic studies
were started with the examination of semen from men whose
partners were currently pregnant (MacLeod, 1950, 1951; MacLeod
and Gold, 1951a) and an interesting discrepancy between results of
different centres that surfaced since then has been reviewed by
Zukerman et al. (1977) and MacLeod and Wang (1979), especially
concerning what should be taken as discriminating values for
fertility. The generally accepted values of 20 10
6
/ml for sperm con-
centration and 40 10
6
spermatozoa per ejaculate, used as normal
Figure 2 Frequency histograms of semen analysis data from fathers, the general population and men screened for normozoospermia. Distribution of
semen volumes (ml, First Column), sperm concentration (10
6
/ml, Second Column), total sperm numbers (10
6
, Third Column), progressively motile
spermatozoa (%, Fourth Column) and morphologically normal spermatozoa (%, Fifth Column) in ejaculates from fathers with time to pregnancy
12 months or less (TTP12, Top Row, black), fathers with no known time to pregnancy (NoTTP, Second Row, green), men screened for normozoos-
permia (SCR, Third Row, yellow) and unscreened men from the general population (UNSCR, Bottom Row, red).
...............................................................................................................................
.............................................................................................................................................................................................
Table IV Total numbers of all, progressively motile and morphologically normal spermatozoa per ejaculate from fathers
and men from screened and unscreened populations
Group Median (and interquartile range) of the number of spermatozoa (10
6
) per ejaculate
Total Progressively motile Morphologically normal
Fathers TTP 12 months 255 (142422) 145 (76242) 37 (1572)
Fathers with no TTP 162 (87277)* 140 (69274) 26 (1158)*
Unscreened (general) population 196 (101336)* 113 (54201)* 29 (1446)*
Screened for normozoospermia 180 (104315)* 107 (59205)* 38 (2060)
*Within columns, signicantly different from TTP 12 (P , 0.05).
WHO reference values for human semen 239

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or reference in WHOs manuals for semen analysis, appear to stem
from MacLeods early work (MacLeod, 1950, 1951; MacLeod and
Gold, 1951a, b), where there is much discussion of the fertility of
men with less than 20 10
6
spermatozoa per millilitre. This value is
close to the fth centile, judging from the text and graphs (MacLeod
and Gold, 1951a, b; MacLeod, 1951). The values for the fth centile
determined in the present analysis are close to these historical
values, except for normal morphology where another classication
system was used.
The fth centile for semen volume from fertile men reported here is
similar to the lower reference limits reported for fertile men in
Norway (fth centile: Haugen et al., 2006) and Germany (2.5th
centile: Cooper et al., 1991). The lower reference limit (fth centile)
for total sperm number per ejaculate is in agreement with those of
MacLeod and Gold (1951a) and close to that determined by
Cooper et al. (1991: 2.5th centile), but lower than in reports from
Ombelet et al. (1997) and Haugen et al. (2006), both using fth cen-
tiles. The limit for sperm concentration lies between those of
MacLeod and Gold (1951a) and Menkveld et al. (2001) using 5th
and 10th centiles as cut-offs and Haugen et al. (2006) and Guzick
et al. (2001) using the fth centile and classication-and-regression,
respectively; both Ombelet et al. (1997: 5th centile) and Gunalp
et al. (2001: ROC) reported lower sperm concentrations as lower
reference limits. The reference limit (fth centile) reported here for
progressive motility is in line with reports from Cooper et al.
(1991), Gunalp et al. (2001) and Haugen et al. (2006).
Morphology data seemed to be centre-dependent, and highly
dependent on the method used to determine the percentage of
normal forms, indicating that these differences are procedural and
demanding that the data selected for analysis should be limited to
those centres adhering to strict guidelines on categorisation (WHO,
1999). Similar lower reference limits for normal sperm morphology
were presented by all authors using the same strict application of cri-
teria (Ombelet et al., 1997; Guzick et al., 2001; Gunalp et al., 2001;
Menkveld et al., 2001). The low proportions of normal spermatozoa,
as dened by those selected in endocervical mucus, will inevitably
produce very low reference limits for a fertile population. Indeed,
such was found in the present analysis, with 3 and 4% normal forms
as the 2.5th and 5th centiles, respectively. With this method, similar
low values of 35% normal forms have been found by ROC analysis
(Pater, 2005) to be optimal cut-off values between fertile and infertile
men whose spermatozoa were used for in vitro fertilization (Coetzee
et al., 1998), intrauterine insemination (Van Waart et al., 2001) and
in spontaneous pregnancies (van der Merwe et al., 2005).
Comparisons of semen characteristics among
different populations of men
In this study, data fromsemen analyses obtained fromfertile men in part-
nerships with TTP of 12 months or less (the reference population) were
compared with data from fathers with unknown TTP, men of unknown
fertility status and men whose semen characteristics conformed to pre-
vious WHO reference values. Semen quality from the reference popu-
lation was superior to that of the other groups used for comparison,
as judged from the primary data of semen volume, sperm concentration
and percentage of normal forms. The percentage of progressively motile
spermatozoa was lower than that in all other groups; however, the
greater total sperm number in this group ensured that the total
number of progressively motile spermatozoa was higher in the reference
population than in the unscreened and screened populations, and the
total number of morphologically normal forms was higher than that in
the unscreened men and fathers with no known TTP. A high number
of motile human spermatozoa is known to increase their entry into
cervical mucus in vitro (Katz et al., 1980).
The other group of fathers, in partnerships with unknown time to
pregnancy, had signicantly lower semen volumes, sperm concen-
trations and percentages of motile and normally formed spermatozoa,
but higher percentages of progressively motile spermatozoa, than the
reference population. The derived values of total numbers of all and
normal spermatozoa were lower than, whereas the total numbers
of progressively motile spermatozoa did not differ from, those from
the reference population.
Semen from unscreened men, assumed to represent the general
population and originally considered as a possible reference group
(see Introduction), had signicantly lower semen volume, sperm con-
centration and percentage of normal forms but a higher percentage of
motile spermatozoa than the fathers with TTP 12 months.
However, total numbers of all, progressively motile and morphologi-
cally normal spermatozoa per ejaculate were lower than those from
the TTP 12 months fathers. This is consistent with the anticipated
inclusion in this population of men with mixed and poor semen
quality, infertile men as well as fathers. Choice of these men as the
reference population would have provided mainly lower values for
the lower reference limits than those obtained from the fathers in
couples with TTP 12 months.
Although obtained from men selected according to previous WHO
criteria to be normozoospermic, semen from the screened population
also displayed signicantly lower semen volumes and sperm concen-
trations but higher percentages of motile and normal forms than the
reference population. Total and motile sperm numbers per ejaculate
were lower, but total numbers of normal forms were not different
from those of the reference population.
Signicance of lower reference limits
Previous semen reference values were presumed to reect an end-
point for the diagnosis, or at least for the further investigation, of
male infertility. However, such an end-point is uncertain for several
reasons. In particular, the condition diagnosed is not strictly male infer-
tility but rather the possible or probable contribution of one or more
semen variables to a multi-factorial condition or disease, namely, a
couples inability to conceive within a given time period. Thus, male
fertility only partially contributes to the outcome of interest, together
with that of female fecundity (te Velde et al., 2000). The prognostic
value of semen components such as sperm number, motility and
morphology, as surrogate markers of male fertility, is also confounded
in several ways; the fertility potential of a man is inuenced by sexual
activity, the function of accessory sex glands and other, dened as well
as yet unrecognized, conditions and routine semen analysis itself has it
own limitations, and does not account for putative sperm dysfunctions
such as immature chromatin or a fragmented DNA.
Interpretation of the reference ranges requires an understanding
that they provide a description of the semen characteristics of
recent fathers. The reference limits should not be over-interpreted
240 Cooper et al.

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to distinguish fertile from infertile men accurately, but they do rep-
resent semen characteristics associated with a couples achieving preg-
nancy within 12 months of unprotected sexual intercourse. The
reference limits provided here are derived from semen samples
from men whose partners conceived spontaneously; as such, the
limits provide only a standardized guide regarding a mans fertility
status. As fathers constitute a select group of individuals, they may
differ in semen values from other normal healthy men. Semen charac-
teristics are highly variable within and among men and these
parameters are not the sole determinants of a couples fertility.
Semen parameters within the 95% reference interval do not guarantee
fertility nor do values outside those limits (in isolation from other
clinical data) necessarily indicate male infertility or pathology. Indeed
(by denition) 5% of the fertile men providing the reference data
have values outside the 95% reference interval. A mans semen
characteristics need to be interpreted in conjunction with his clinical
information. The reference limits provided here are from semen
samples initiating natural conceptions and as such indicate whether a
man may need infertility treatment, but they should not be used to
determine the nature of that treatment.
Limitations of the current reference values
The data included in the present analysis were obtained from labora-
tories using WHO methods for various studies of apparently fertile
men and volunteers from the general population. It is difcult to get
men to volunteer for reproductive studies that involve semen analysis
and the selection biases involved are well recognized. Generally, the
acceptance rates following requests to donate semen are low, in the
range of 1319% (Bonde et al., 1998; Andersen et al., 2000; Jouannet
et al., 2001; Jensen et al., 2002; Swan et al., 2003; Eustache et al., 2004;
Muller et al., 2004). Such low rates may invalidate attempts to extrap-
olate data to the general population, as the majority of men are not
represented by the groups volunteering to provide reference semen
samples. The data may be made more representative by permitting
samples to be provided at home where donation rates are higher,
at 3254% (Larsen et al., 1998; Hjollund et al., 2000; Jrgensen
et al., 2001; Andersen et al., 2002; Cohn et al., 2002), but at the
expense of introducing more variables before semen analysis begins,
such as the handling and temperature of the sample during transit
to the laboratory and the increased time before analysis. The extent
of this bias may be large (Handelsman, 1997) but is contested
(Eustache et al., 2004; Muller et al., 2004; Hauser et al., 2005).
Whether or not differences exist between the semen quality of men
who are willing to provide semen samples and those who are not, can
be addressed indirectly by studying semen characteristics from initial
responders to advertisements and those subsequently recruited.
These comparisons indicate signicant differences in semen quality
between initial and later responders (Cohn et al., 2002). There may
be a greater incidence of previous unfavourable pregnancy outcomes
in the partners of volunteers compared with non-volunteers, as shown
in a French study (Muller et al., 2004). On the other hand, the com-
parability of semen characteristics of study and non-study subjects
recruited from infertility clinics (Hauser et al., 2005), of serum testos-
terone between donors and non-donors (Andersen et al., 2000) and
of characteristics of the pregnancies between semen donors and
non-donors argue against there being major differences between the
populations of men who provide semen samples for research and
those who do not.
The studies included in the present analysis were conducted in
different regions of the world with some areas over-represented,
such as Northern Europe, and others, such as Africa, parts of
Europe and Central and South America, under-represented. There
were some differences between the results of the different studies
but the origin of these differences is unclear. It is possible that they
represent real biological differences among men in different regions,
or that they are laboratory-dependent biases of measurement,
despite their adherence to the WHO manual methods. The studies
were conducted over many years, during which time the WHO stan-
dardized methods changed for assessing sperm motility and mor-
phology and for performing quality control. The earlier studies were
performed without formal quality assurance activities whereas the
later studies were conducted with internal and EQC, and whereas
the laboratories reputedly performed well, not all laboratories
reported QC data for analysis and adjustment of the results.
Assumptions were made that a single semen sample can be taken to
represent each man and that the rst of multiple ejaculates is repre-
sentative. The present analysis may be limited in precision by the
inclusion of samples obtained after an abstinence period of 27
days. This range is allowed because of the practical difculties in
obtaining semen samples following a prescribed period of abstinence.
To dene reference intervals specic to more precise periods of absti-
nence may be desirable, but would require a much larger sample size.
In a healthy man, the total number of spermatozoa emitted in an eja-
culate will depend not only on the time of abstinence, but also on the
volume of his testes, the size of his epididymal sperm reserve and the
extent of ductal patency.
Further studies will be required to conrm the validity of global
reference ranges. Prospective studies will need to be designed to
avoid possible among-laboratory variations in methodology and
might include centralized assessment of sperm concentration on pre-
served samples (Jonckheere et al., 2005), video recordings for sperm
motility and morphology or automated computer assisted semen
analysis using the same standardized equipment. If regional differences
are revealed, their mechanism and signicance for fertility will need to
be studied before it can be decided whether there should be specic
reference values for different ethnic groups or regions. It may be that
laboratories have to produce their own local reference ranges for
semen parameters. A future, conrmatory, analysis would include a
systematic review of laboratories using more highly standardized tech-
niques (such as those presented in the forthcoming fth edition of the
WHO laboratory manual for the examination and processing of
human semen) and reporting successful participation in external and
IQC programmes, and would take geographical and ethnic origins
into account. It will be of interest to determine the success of
various clinical management protocols that incorporate the reference
limits into research and practice guidelines.
Authors Role
T.G.C. initiated and designed the study, conducted the data collection,
participated in the data analysis and interpretation, wrote the article
and prepared the tables and gures. E.N. performed the statistical ana-
lyses and contributed to the drafting and editing of the article. S.E.
WHO reference values for human semen 241

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participated in writing portions of the article. J.A., T.B.H., C.W. and
H.W.G.B. contributed to study design, provided data and participated
in editing the article. H.M.B., T.K. and M.T.M. participated in editing
the article. K.M.V. provided technical assistance during data collection
and analysis and participated in editing the article.
Acknowledgements
We thank Drs D.J. Handelsman, P.F.A. Van Look and T.M.M. Farley
for useful comments on the manuscript, all the investigators who con-
tributed to the database and all the men who provided semen
samples. The editorial group of the fth edition of the WHO labora-
tory manual for the examination and processing of human semen
(forthcoming), is thanked for recognizing the need for this study and
identifying sources of data.
Funding
The study was investigator-initiated. Parts of this study were funded by
the UNDP/UNFPA/WHO/World Bank Special Programme of
Research, Development and Research Training in Human Reproduc-
tion (HRP), World Health Organization (WHO). WHO provided
technical assistance in study design and data analysis, but had no
role in data collection or the initial drafting of the report. Decisions
regarding the interpretation of the data and review and revision of
the manuscript were made on the basis of discussions between
WHO and the authors. The corresponding author and the sponsor
had full access to the data and the corresponding author had nal
responsibility for submitting the manuscript.
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Appendix
R. Anderson, University of Edinburgh, Scotland, United Kingdom;
Auger J., Ho pital Cochin, Paris, France; H.W.G. Baker, University of
Melbourne, Carlton, Victoria, Australia; J.P. Bonde, Department of
Occupational Medicine, University Hospital, Aarhus, Denmark;
Y.-Q. Gu, National Research Institute for Family Planning, Beijing,
China; D.J. Handelsman, ANZAC Research Institute, Sydney, New
South Wales, Australia; T.B. Haugen, Oslo University College, Oslo,
Norway; A. Kamischke, Institute of Reproductive Medicine of the
University, Munster, Germany; R. McLachlan, Prince Henrys Institute
of Medical Research, Clayton, Victoria, Australia; M.C. Meriggiola,
University of Bologna, Bologna, Italy; G. Noe, Instituto Chileno de
Medicina Reproductiva, Santiago, Chile; J.W. Overstreet, University
of California, Davis, CA, USA; N.E. Skakkebaek, University Depart-
ment of Growth and Reproduction, Rigshospitalet, Copenhagen,
Denmark; S.H. Swan, University of Rochester, Rochester, NY, USA;
C. Wang, Harbor-UCLA Medical Center, Torrance, CA, USA;
F. Wu, University of Manchester, Manchester, United Kingdom; and
the World Health Organization, Geneva, Switzerland.
Submitted on January 23, 2009; resubmitted on September 7, 2009; accepted on
September 21, 2009
WHO reference values for human semen 245

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