News

Advise Fertility Preservation Prior to Cancer Treatment


 

MONTREAL — Most female cancer patients appear to have normal reproductive capacity before cancer therapy, making them excellent candidates for fertility preservation, according to results of one of the first studies to compare ovarian stimulation outcomes in cancer patients and controls.

“We need to get this message out [to physicians] so they can better inform their patients,” Rodolfo Quintero, M.D., said at the joint annual meeting of the American Society for Reproductive Medicine and the Canadian Fertility and Andrology Society.

Dr. Quintero reviewed the ovarian stimulation outcomes of 32 cancer patients seeking oocyte or embryo cryopreservation for fertility preservation before chemotherapy or radiation, and compared them with 31 age-matched controls who were undergoing ovarian stimulation for in vitro fertilization because of male factor infertility.

The average age of the cancer patients was 30.8 years, compared with 31.5 years in the control group. Cancer patients underwent a combined total of 35 ovarian stimulation cycles, compared with 42 cycles in the control group, said Dr. Quintero, a fellow in reproductive endocrinology and infertility at Stanford (Calif.) University Medical Center.

There were no significant differences between groups in terms of the number of stimulation days, the amount of gonadotropins used, or the number of eggs retrieved. There were two cycle cancellations and one failed oocyte retrieval in the cancer group, versus none in the controls.

Recommended Reading

Whole-Breast Irradiation: Worthwhile in Early Ca? : New data show that adding whole-breast irradiation to standard treatment may increase positive results.
MDedge Family Medicine
In Vitro Fertilization May Increase Breast Cancer Risk in Predisposed
MDedge Family Medicine
Gabapentin May Help Hot Flashes in Breast Cancer
MDedge Family Medicine
Deaths Again Prompt Mifepristone Label Change
MDedge Family Medicine
Epstein-Barr Virus Poses Little Threat to Fetus
MDedge Family Medicine
Cesarean Time Longer in Older, Overweight Women
MDedge Family Medicine
Obesity Before Pregnancy May Lessen Chance of Labor Induction Success
MDedge Family Medicine
GI Agents: Part I
MDedge Family Medicine
Low-Dose Continuous OC Found Effective in Two Studies
MDedge Family Medicine
Do antibiotics interfere with the efficacy of oral contraceptives?
MDedge Family Medicine