| Literature DB >> 29434664 |
Francesca De Felice1, Claudia Marchetti2, Anna Di Pinto2, Angela Musella2, Innocenza Palaia2, Maria Grazia Porpora2, Ludovico Muzii2, Vincenzo Tombolini1, Pierluigi Benedetti Panici2, Federica Tomao2.
Abstract
Due to substantial improvement in the diagnosis and treatment of gynaecologic cancers, a better understanding of patient care needs to be revised. We reviewed the literature related to fertility preservation strategies in gynaecological cancer and discussed current general management approaches. New technical modalities and patients' own desire for motherhood should be integral and paramount in the clinical evaluation to significantly contribute to preserving fertility in those women diagnosed with gynaecologic cancers during the reproductive years.Entities:
Keywords: cervical cancer; endometrial cancer; fertility preservation; gynaecologic cancers; ovarian cancer
Year: 2018 PMID: 29434664 PMCID: PMC5804712 DOI: 10.3332/ecancer.2018.798
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ecancermedicalscience ISSN: 1754-6605
Figure 1.Ovarian damage.
Chemotherapy agents used in gynaecological cancer.
| Drugs | Mechanism of action | Target cell | Risk of amenorrhoea | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Single-stranded DNA breaks | Non primordial follicles | High | ||
| Cyclophosphamide | ||||
| Ifosfamide | ||||
| Inter- and intra-strand DNA cross-links; chromosomal damage | Oocyte | Intermediate | ||
| Cisplatin | ||||
| Carboplatin | ||||
| Inhibition of microtubule formation and spindle functions | Primordial follicles | Intermediate | ||
| Paclitaxel | ||||
| Inhibition of DNA repliction and trascription | Stromal tissue | Low | ||
| Doxorubicin | ||||
| Alteration DNA synthesis | Pre-antral | Low | ||
| Gemcitabine | ||||
| 5-fluorouracil | ||||
Fertility preservation strategies in gynaecological cancer.
| Strategy | Definition | |
|---|---|---|
| Conization | Removal of the ectocervix and endocervical canals | |
| Radical trachelectomy | Removal of the cervix with preservation of the uterus | |
| Ovarian transposition | Transposition of ovaries out of the radiation field | |
| Unilateral oophorectomy | Removal of one ovary | |
| Progestin-based therapy | Progestin therapy and endometrial curettage | |
| GnRHa | GnRHa-based therapy | |
| Embryo cryopreservation | In vitro fertilisation of oocytes, then cryopreserved | |
| Oocyte cryopreservation | Unfertilised oocyte cryopreservation | |
| Ovarian cryopreservation | Removal of ovarian tissue, then cryopreserved | |
Figure 2.Fertility preservation techniques.