Can lycopene boost sperm quality by 70%?
Lycopene, which gives tomatoes their red colour, is now the focus of a study at University of Sheffield to measure the boost to male fertility offered by an over-the-counter modified lycopene supplement known to double blood lycopene levels.
The Sheffield team led by Professor Allan Pacey one of Britain’s leading experts on male factor infertility is recruiting 60 healthy male students and university staff aged 18-30 to take part in the three-month study.
The important study comes as Britain faces an epidemic of childlessness with one in six couples unable to conceive and half of the problem is believed to be caused by men having poor quality sperm.
Half of the group will receive twice-daily capsules of the over-the-counter supplement called XY Pro, and the other half will receive identical dummy capsules.
“Studies elsewhere in the world have shown that the antioxidant properties of lycopene seem to have a beneficial effect on sperm quality and we want to investigate this further,” Professor Pacey said.
“Production of sperm takes three months. This study will tell us if lycopene improves the quality of sperm already in development by reducing DNA damage, and whether it produces an overall increase in the number of mature sperm.”
“There is enough evidence out there to indicate this study is worth doing and I am cautiously optimistic. If it works in the volunteers we would then consider testing it in infertile patients.”
The group will provide sperm and blood samples at the start of the project to establish baseline sperm quality and lycopene levels.
They will give two further sets of blood and sperm samples halfway through the study and at the end to see how much the XY Pro has boosted their sperm.
Neither the researchers nor the volunteers will know who got the XY Pro and who got the dummy capsules until after the trial has ended to prevent them trying to influence the results.