UK’s national sperm bank stops recruiting donors

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The UK’s first national sperm bank has stopped recruiting donors less than two years after its launch, it has emerged.

The National Sperm Bank said it was unable to fund further donor recruitment, having successfully only taken on seven men.

It was set up in October 2014 with a government grant to tackle the shortage of donors, particularly at NHS clinics.

The Department of Health say the NSB’s demise will not affect people’s access to safe sperm donation services.

A shortage of donors often drives patients overseas or to unregistered services.

Based in Birmingham, it received a one-off £77,000 grant from the Department of Health to get up and running. The aim was for the bank to be financially self-sufficient within one year.

The NSB was a joint project run by the charity the National Gamete Donation Trust and Birmingham Fertility Centre, a unit at Birmingham Women’s Hospital.

In total, eight sperm donors were recruited since it launched, with one later dropping out.

But with the full donor process taking up to 18 months, the bank was unable to generate income in the second year.

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Sperm samples must be frozen for at least six months before further testing

Following a change in the law, all children conceived as the result of sperm donation on or after 1 April 2005, have the right to know the identity of their father when they turn 18.

While a donor is not the legal parent and is not named on a birth certificate, it is believed many men have been deterred from volunteering because of the new rules.

Charles Lister, chair of the National Gamete Donation Trust said: “One of the lessons learned from running the NSB is that the level of ongoing investment required for successful donor recruitment is beyond the resources of a small charity like the NGDT.”

Laura Spoelstra, who left her role as chief executive of the NGDT, earlier this year and believes more could have been done to put the NSB on a former financial footing.

She said: “Once you have a donor at least 70% along the process, you have income. It’s a business model. It required a business way of thinking. Once you know you’ve got income in the pipeline, you can use that to offset costs.”


The screening process

  • Potential donors – aged between 18 and 40 – are screened for any genetic abnormalities that could be passed onto offspring
  • Semen samples are analysed for sperm quantity, quality and movement, and donors checked for any infectious diseases, such as HIV
  • Those who pass these tests have their sample frozen for at least six months before it is tested again
  • Not all sperm cells survive freezing and thawing, which means there may be a reduction in quality. Only men whose samples remain of acceptable quality after freezing can be donors

Demand for sperm donations in the UK has steadily grown and hundreds of new donors, who are compensated £35 per clinic visit, are registered each year.

The Human Fertilisation and Embryology Authority estimate that 2,000 children are born every year in the UK using donated eggs, sperm or embryos. The most recent data from 2014, shows 85 licensed UK clinics – both private and NHS – performing sperm donor insemination.

But the majority of licensed clinics are based in London and the south east of England and treatment can be expensive. The cost of donor sperm from the UK’s largest private sperm bank, the London Sperm Bank, is currently £950. The National Sperm Bank was proposing to charge £300 per insemination.

Prof Allan Pacey, a spokesman for the British Fertility Society, believes there is still a need for a national sperm bank.

“It doesn’t have to be bricks and mortar, it could be a network,” he said.

“We need better coordination and this just highlights how expensive it’s going to be.”

Raising awareness

Mr Lister said the NSB had demonstrated that with targeted information, “more men are willing to become donors and give the precious gift of life”.

He said the NGDT would continue to focus on raising awareness about the need for more UK donors.

The first donations from the NSB will be released shortly by Birmingham Women’s Fertility Centre to clinics across the UK.

The centre has its own sperm bank, which will continue recruiting donors.

A spokeswoman for the centre said: “We fully understand and support the decision made by NGDT.”

In a statement, the Department of Health said: “We gave a one-off start-up grant to help set up the National Sperm Bank, and while the number of donations have not been sufficient to support it continuing to seek new donors, this will have no impact on people being able to access safe egg and sperm donation services.”

UK’s national sperm bank stops recruiting donors