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The Right to Bear Children: Preserving Fertility in Women With Cancer


Medically Reviewed On: February 28, 2003

Although cancer risk is known to rise with age, the disease can strike people at any stage of life. Cancer patients of all ages tend to be highly focused on getting through cancer therapy, fighting the disease, and surviving cancer-free. But premenopausal women with cancer have an additional set of concerns. Each will be forced to ask herself the following questions: As a woman with cancer, do I feel the same way about having children as I did before I was diagnosed? Do I want to protect my ability to get pregnant at all costs? What can be done to preserve my fertility through the arduous chemotherapy process? Are fertility treatments hard to endure? Are they effective? What are my chances of getting pregnant once I'm out of the woods? Is it worth the trouble?

Lynn Westphal, MD, Assistant Professor and Director of the Donor Oocyte Program at Stanford Reproductive Endocrinology and Infertility Center, is a leader in the field of fertility preservation. Dr. Westphal has worked with oncology teams to help a growing number of women conceive after cancer therapy. Below, she outlines women's options, both common and experimental.

What steps can a woman take to preserve her fertility before starting cancer therapy?
A woman's treatment options will depend on the type of cancer she has, the type of treatment she's going to receive, and how much time she has before starting treatment. If she's going to start therapy very soon, her only option may be a gonadotropin-releasing hormone agonist (GnRH), a medication that may ultimately preserve ovarian function by shutting down the ovaries during chemotherapy. Although unproven, it is believed that putting the ovaries to sleep during chemotherapy may actually protect them. Afterwards, ovarian function may return to normal or close to normal.

Another thing we sometimes do is freeze a woman's eggs or embryos before therapy. If she has a couple of weeks before the start of chemotherapy, we may discuss stimulating her ovaries, removing several eggs, and then either freezing the eggs or fertilizing them with male sperm and freezing the embryos. This is essentially the same as an in vitro fertilization cycle.

What factors affect a woman's chances of getting pregnant after she completes cancer therapy?
The most important factor is her age at the time that she's receiving chemotherapy. If she's in her late thirties or forties, it's less likely that her ovarian function will return to normal. In addition, the type of chemotherapy drug and the total dose are important. Some types of chemotherapy are much more damaging to the ovaries than other types.

If preserving fertility is a primary concern, a woman may request a type of chemotherapy that could have a less toxic effect on the ovaries.

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