AI Breakthrough Helps Couple Conceive: In a remarkable medical achievement, an artificial intelligence (AI) system has enabled a couple to conceive after 19 years of infertility by identifying just two viable sperm cells from a semen sample that appeared azoospermic (containing no sperm). The breakthrough, detailed in The Lancet journal, marks a major leap in fertility treatment for men with severe infertility issues.

AI Scans 25 Lakh Images to Find Hidden Sperm
The couple — a 39-year-old man and a 37-year-old woman from the United States — had previously undergone multiple unsuccessful in vitro fertilisation (IVF) cycles and two surgical sperm extraction procedures.
Traditional microscopic examinations often fail to detect sperm in men with azoospermia, where the ejaculate appears normal but contains no visible sperm. “A semen sample can appear totally normal, but when you look under the microscope, you discover just a sea of cellular debris, with no sperm visible,” said Dr. Zev Williams, Director of the Columbia University Fertility Center and senior author of the study.
The STAR System: AI-Powered Sperm Discovery
To overcome this challenge, researchers developed an AI-driven system named Sperm Tracking and Recovery (STAR). This innovative technique combines high-speed imaging and AI-based analysis to locate rare, viable sperm in samples once considered infertile.
Using high-powered imaging, the STAR system scanned over 25 lakh (2.5 million) images from a 3.5-millilitre semen sample in just two hours. While manual observation revealed no sperm, the AI detected seven sperm cells — two motile and five non-motile.
A robotic system then isolated the motile sperm, which were injected into mature oocytes (egg cells) to form embryos. These embryos were transferred three days later, leading to a successful pregnancy confirmed by ultrasound at eight weeks, showing normal fetal development and a heartbeat of 172 bpm.
How the Technology Works
- Imaging: The system captures millions of microscopic images of a semen sample in under an hour.
- AI Analysis: The algorithm identifies potential sperm cells in real time.
- Microfluidic Chip: A chip with tiny channels separates the sperm-containing portion.
- Robotic Extraction: A robotic arm isolates the viable sperm for fertilization or storage.
This integrated approach enables high-speed, real-time identification and recovery of rare sperm — a process that was previously slow, manual, and often unsuccessful.
A New Hope for Male Infertility
The success of the STAR method represents a potential paradigm shift in treating male-factor infertility, offering hope to men diagnosed with non-obstructive azoospermia — a condition once considered nearly impossible to treat effectively.
Dr. Williams noted that many couples are often told they have little chance of having a biological child, but AI is now opening new possibilities. Larger clinical trials are already underway to evaluate the STAR system’s efficacy and scalability for wider patient populations.
A Glimpse into the Future of Fertility Care
This case underscores how AI and robotics are reshaping reproductive medicine — from identifying microscopic cells to improving IVF outcomes. For millions of couples facing infertility, the STAR breakthrough offers a powerful message: hope can now be found in the details that only AI can see.