American Society of Hirudotherapy

Efficacy and Safety of Hirudotherapy for Improving Sperm Quality Parameters in Male Infertility: A Randomized Controlled Trial

Abtahi-Forooshani MS, Roozbehani S, Fatemi M, Noori A (2026) · Health Science Reports · n=50

RCT evidence detailTrial reference

Study Profile

Design
single-center, parallel-group, open-label randomized controlled trial of hirudotherapy versus no-intervention control in idiopathic male infertility (Fal.C. Islamic Azad University, Isfahan, Iran)
Sample size (n)
50
Intervention
Weekly Hirudo medicinalis leech therapy for 3 months (n=25); semen parameters assessed at baseline and end of intervention
Comparator
No-intervention control group (n=25) with semen parameters assessed at the same time points
Primary endpoint
Sperm concentration, total sperm count, progressive motility, normal morphology (WHO criteria), sperm DNA fragmentation (TUNEL assay), protamine deficiency (chromomycin A3 staining), and sperm viability/morphology by flow cytometry
Primary result
Sperm concentration increased from 57.7±17.1 to 63.4±13.1 million/mL in the leech arm (p=0.006); total count, progressive motility, and normal morphology all improved significantly vs control (p<0.05); DNA fragmentation decreased by 3.9% in leech arm vs control (p=0.04); protamine deficiency reduced (p=0.02); no adverse events reported
Follow-up duration
3 months (12 weekly sessions plus end-of-intervention semen analysis)

Key Findings

  • First PubMed-indexed RCT of medicinal leech therapy for male infertility sperm quality parameters
  • Statistically significant improvement in sperm concentration, motility, morphology, and DNA integrity in the leech arm vs no-treatment control
  • DNA fragmentation reduction of ~4% in the leech arm — biologically plausible mechanism via systemic anti-inflammatory and microcirculatory effects
  • No reported adverse events across 12 weekly sessions over 3 months
  • Iranian Registry of Clinical Trials registration (IRCT20230502058045N) supports transparency

Limitations

  • Small sample (n=50, only 25 per arm) limits subgroup analysis and effect-size precision
  • Open-label design with no-intervention control — placebo, expectancy, and lifestyle-change effects cannot be excluded
  • Single-center Iranian trial — generalizability to other infertility populations untested
  • No pregnancy or live-birth outcomes reported; biomarker-only endpoints
  • Mechanism speculative — no measurement of inflammatory markers, oxidative stress, or testicular blood flow to support causal pathway

Clinical Implications

Abtahi-Forooshani 2026 is the first randomized hirudotherapy trial in male infertility and provides preliminary biomarker-level evidence that 12 weekly leech sessions may improve sperm quality parameters in idiopathic infertility. For US clinicians, the trial is investigational only and does not support routine use — male infertility is not among K040187-cleared indications and the open-label design leaves substantial uncertainty. The trial does add an emerging Iranian dimension to the global hirudotherapy evidence base and motivates double-blind sham-controlled replication with downstream fertility outcomes (pregnancy, live birth) before any clinical translation can be considered.

This website provides educational information and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment recommendations. Medicinal leech therapy carries clinically meaningful risks and should be performed only by qualified clinicians under institutionally approved protocols. FDA 510(k) clearance for medicinal leeches is limited to specific indications; investigational and off-label discussions are labeled accordingly. For patient-specific guidance, consult a qualified healthcare provider.