| Literature DB >> 26728489 |
Matteo Lambertini1, Lucia Del Mastro2, Maria C Pescio3, Claus Y Andersen4, Hatem A Azim5, Fedro A Peccatori6, Mauro Costa7, Alberto Revelli8, Francesca Salvagno8, Alessandra Gennari9, Filippo M Ubaldi10, Giovanni B La Sala11, Cristofaro De Stefano12, W Hamish Wallace13, Ann H Partridge14, Paola Anserini3.
Abstract
In the last years, thanks to the improvement in the prognosis of cancer patients, a growing attention has been given to the fertility issues. International guidelines on fertility preservation in cancer patients recommend that physicians discuss, as early as possible, with all patients of reproductive age their risk of infertility from the disease and/or treatment and their interest in having children after cancer, and help with informed fertility preservation decisions. As recommended by the American Society of Clinical Oncology and the European Society for Medical Oncology, sperm cryopreservation and embryo/oocyte cryopreservation are standard strategies for fertility preservations in male and female patients, respectively; other strategies (e.g. pharmacological protection of the gonads and gonadal tissue cryopreservation) are considered experimental techniques. However, since then, new data have become available, and several issues in this field are still controversial and should be addressed by both patients and their treating physicians.In April 2015, physicians with expertise in the field of fertility preservation in cancer patients from several European countries were invited in Genova (Italy) to participate in a workshop on the topic of "cancer and fertility preservation". A total of ten controversial issues were discussed at the conference. Experts were asked to present an up-to-date review of the literature published on these topics and the presentation of own unpublished data was encouraged. On the basis of the data presented, as well as the expertise of the invited speakers, a total of ten recommendations were discussed and prepared with the aim to help physicians in counseling their young patients interested in fertility preservation.Although there is a great interest in this field, due to the lack of large prospective cohort studies and randomized trials on these topics, the level of evidence is not higher than 3 for most of the recommendations highlighting the need of further research efforts in many areas of this field. The participation to the ongoing registries and prospective studies is crucial to acquire more robust information in order to provide evidence-based recommendations.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26728489 PMCID: PMC4700580 DOI: 10.1186/s12916-015-0545-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med ISSN: 1741-7015 Impact factor: 8.775
Levels of evidence and grades of recommendation (according to the ESMO Clinical Practice Guidelines for fertility preservation in cancer patients [11])
| Levels of evidence | |
|---|---|
| I | Evidence from at least one large randomized, controlled trial of good methodological quality (low potential for bias) or meta-analyses of well-conducted randomized trials without heterogeneity |
| II | Small randomized trials or large randomized trials with a suspicion of bias (lower methodological quality) or meta-analyses of such trials or of trials with demonstrated heterogeneity |
| III | Prospective cohort studies |
| IV | Retrospective cohort studies or case–control studies |
| V | Studies without control group, case reports, experts opinions |
| Grade of recommendation | |
| A | Strong evidence for efficacy with a substantial clinical benefit, strongly recommended |
| B | Strong or moderate evidence for efficacy but with a limited clinical benefit, generally recommended |
| C | Insufficient evidence for efficacy or benefit does not outweigh the risk or the disadvantages (adverse events, costs, etc.), optional |
| D | Moderate evidence against efficacy or for adverse outcome, generally not recommended |
| E | Strong evidence against efficacy or for adverse outcome, never recommended |
Risk of treatment-related infertility with the main anticancer therapies (modified from the original [9])
| Degree of risk | Type of anticancer treatment | |
|---|---|---|
| Women | Men | |
| High risk | -HSC transplantation with cyclophosphamide/TBI or cyclophosphamide/busulfan | -Radiation > 2.5 Gy to testis |
| Intermediate risk | -BEACOPP | -Busulfan (600 mg/kg) |
| Low risk | -ABVD in women ≥ 32 years | -Carboplatin (2 g/m2) |
| Very low or no risk | -ABVD in women < 32 years | -Amsacrine |
| Unknown risk | -Monoclonal antibodies (trastuzumab, bevacizumab, cetuximab) | -Oxaliplatin |
HSC hematopoietic stem cell, TBI total body irradiation, CMF cyclophosphamide, methotrexate, fluorouracil, CEF cyclophosphamide, epirubicin, fluorouracil, CAF cyclophosphamide, doxorubicin, fluorouracil, TAC docetaxel, doxorubicin, cyclophosphamide, BEACOPP doxorubicin, belomycin, vincristine, etoposide, cyclophosphamide, procarbazine, BCNU carmustine, CCNU lomustine, AC doxorubicin, cyclophosphamide, EC epirubicin, cyclophosphamide, ABVD doxorubicin, bleomycin, vinblastin, dacarbazine, CHOP cyclophosphamide, doxorubicin, vincristine, prednisone, CVP cyclophosphamide, vincristine, prednisone, AML acute myeloid leukemia, ALL acute lymphocitic leukemia
The choices regarding fertility preservation of female cancer patients enrolled in the Italian study
| Type of cancer | Eligible for cryopreservation strategies | Declined cryopreservation strategies | Accepted oocyte cryopreservation | Accepted ovarian tissue cryopreservation |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Breast | 186 (66.2) | 76 (40.9) | 103 (55.4) | 7 (3.8) |
| Hematologic disease | 98 (79.7) | 27 (27.6) | 50 (51.0) | 21 (21.4) |
| Others | 75 (86.2) | 17 (22.7) | 38 (50.7) | 20 (26.7) |
| Total | 359 (73.1) | 120 (33.4) | 191 (53.2) | 48 (13.4) |
Published experiences with “random-start protocols”
| Author | No. patients | No. of retrieved oocytes | No. of cryopreserved oocytes/embryos | Maturation rate (%) | Fertilization rate (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Von Wolff et al. [ | 12 | 10.0 ± 5.7 | NR | 80.4 | 75.6 |
| Michaan et al. [ | 22 | 8.8 ± 6.0 | 5.4 ± 4.5 | NR | NR |
| Bedoschi et al. [ | 2 | 12 | 7 | 70.0 | 83.3 |
| Sonmezer et al. [ | 3 | 9 - 17 | 7 - 10 | 58.8 – 77.7 | 69.2 – 87.5 |
| Maman et al. [ | 5 | 12.8 ± 8.4 | 6.4 ± 6.6 | 48.6 ± 18.3 | 69.2 ± 47.4 |
| Nayak et al. [ | 4 | 6 - 30 | 5 - 20 | NR | 93.3 – 100 |
| Cakmak H et al. [ | 35 | 9.9 (7.7 – 12.7) | NR | 67 (59 – 76) | 87 (72–100) |
| Buendgen NK et al. [ | 10 | 8.8 (SD: 5.1) | NR | NR | 63.6 (SD: 32.9) |
| Keskin U et al. [ | 3 | 4 - 16 | 3 - 9 | NR | 75 |
NR not reported, SD standard deviation
The 10 recommendations drafted by the expert panel
| Recommendations |
|---|
| 1) Ovarian stimulating drugs with standard treatment protocols may be administered in subfertile/infertile women without increasing the risk of developing breast cancer (III, B). The long-term use of clomiphene outside the current limited indications (i.e. first-line therapy of WHO Group II anovulatory infertility) should be discouraged because of a possible increase in breast cancer risk (III, B). |
| 2) Pregnancy in cancer survivors, after adequate treatment and follow up, should not be discouraged, including among patients with endocrine-sensitive breast cancer (III, A). |
| 3) All patients with potential interest in keeping their fertility should be referred to fertility unit for adequate determination of risk of infertility, chances of future conception and how to proactively preserve it (V, A). However, some cancer patients will not require the help of a fertility clinic after cancer treatment (V, B). Since several patient- and treatment-related factors are associated with the risk of developing infertility, the oncofertility counseling should be tailored to the individual patient (V, A). |
| 4) In men, sperm cryopreservation is an easily accessible and widely available option in more than 95 % of patients and should be encouraged for those who want to preserve fertility (III, A). On the contrary, from 2 % to 65 % of women undergo one of the available cryopreservation options: oncologists should discuss with them the fertility issues and secure proper counseling in appropriate centers prior to cancer treatment (IV, A). |
| 5) Paucity of data is available on fatherhood after cancer. Although most of the published data are reassuring, some recent conflicting results suggest a potential increased risk of birth defects particularly among the children born closer to a paternal cancer diagnosis, and caution should be taken in counseling these patients (V, B for discussion with patients); data on children conceived after ART are too scarce to draw any conclusion although in the general population, available evidence for the outcomes of progeny after ART suggests safety of the techniques themselves (V, B for discussion with patients). |
| 6) The current limited data suggest the safety of a COS in cancer patients (III, B). “Random-start protocols” can be employed to avoid delays in anticancer treatment initiation (III, B). LHRHa ovulation triggering should be adopted in patients at moderate-high risk for OHSS (I, A). Letrozole (or tamoxifen) should be incorporated in the protocol for COS in cancer patients with hormone-responsive tumors (III, B). |
| 7) Embryo and oocyte cryopreservation are standard options for fertility preservation (III, B). Vitrification showed a better performance than slow freezing (II, B). During oncofertility counseling, patients should be aware that data on the success of these strategies derive from infertile women in general and that a different ovarian response to stimulation might be expected in cancer patients (IV, B). |
| 8) The best candidates for ovarian tissue cryopreservation are prepubertal girls (III, A). The technique may also be proposed to patients scheduled for treatments with a high risk of premature ovarian insufficiency who cannot delay anticancer treatments or who have already received chemotherapy, or with contraindications to COS (III, B). Patients with cancer with a high risk of malignant contamination to the ovaries (e.g. aggressive hematologic malignancies) should not be considered eligible for ovarian tissue auto-transplantation (V, B). |
| 9) In order to optimize the procedure in terms of both patient management and cost-effectiveness, the harvesting of the tissue can be performed locally but subsequent sample freezing and storage centralized (III, B). A well-organized network between fertility units is required (III, B). |
| 10) Ovarian suppression with the use of LHRHa during chemotherapy should be considered a reliable strategy to preserve ovarian function and fertility, at least in breast cancer patients, given the availability of new data suggesting both the safety and the efficacy of the procedure have become available (I, A)*. |