| Literature DB >> 30271379 |
Donatella Paoli1, Francesco Pallotti1, Andrea Lenzi1, Francesco Lombardo1.
Abstract
Testicular cancer (TC) is one of the most treatable of all malignancies and the management of the quality of life of these patients is increasingly important, especially with regard to their sexuality and fertility. Survivors must overcome anxiety and fears about reduced fertility and possible pregnancy-related risks as well as health effects in offspring. There is thus a growing awareness of the need for reproductive counseling of cancer survivors. Studies found a high level of sperm DNA damage in TC patients in comparison with healthy, fertile controls, but no significant difference between these patients and infertile patients. Sperm DNA alterations due to cancer treatment persist from 2 to 5 years after the end of the treatment and may be influenced by both the type of therapy and the stage of the disease. Population studies reported a slightly reduced overall fertility of TC survivors and a more frequent use of ART than the general population, with a success rate of around 50%. Paternity after a diagnosis of cancer is an important issue and reproductive potential is becoming a major quality of life factor. Sperm chromatin instability associated with genome instability is the most important reproductive side effect related to the malignancy or its treatment. Studies investigating the magnitude of this damage could have a considerable translational importance in the management of cancer patients, as they could identify the time needed for the germ cell line to repair nuclear damage and thus produce gametes with a reduced risk for the offspring.Entities:
Keywords: cancer survivors; fatherhood; reproductive outcome; sperm DNA damage; sperm chromatin; testicular cancer
Year: 2018 PMID: 30271379 PMCID: PMC6146098 DOI: 10.3389/fendo.2018.00506
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Endocrinol (Lausanne) ISSN: 1664-2392 Impact factor: 5.555
Figure 1Aetiology and pathogenesis of sperm DNA damage.
Studies of sperm DNA damage in testicular cancer patients after orchiectomy and pre antineoplastic treatment, subdivided by methodology.
| Fossa et al. ( | 39 | 18 semen donors | Increased |
| Kobayashi et al. ( | 20 | 12 healthy fertile | Increased |
| Stahl et al. ( | 20 | 278 military conscripts | NOT increased |
| Stahl et al. ( | 25 | 278 military conscripts | NOT increased |
| O'Flaherty et al. ( | 15 | 21 infertile + 21 healthy volunteers | Increased |
| Stahl et al. ( | 25 | 137 healthy fertile | Increased |
| Said et al. ( | 39 | 20 healthy fertile | Increased |
| Smit et al. ( | 52 | 22 healthy fertile | NOT increased |
| O'Flaherty et al. ( | 16 | 11 infertile + 11 healthy volunteers | Increased vs. healthy |
| McDowell et al. ( | 37 | 35 healthy volunteers | NOT increased |
| Bujan et al. ( | 53 | 257 fertile | Increased |
| Total | 341 | ||
| O'Donovan et al. ( | 13 | 14 healthy fertile | Increased |
| O'Flaherty et al. ( | 15 | 21 infertile + 21 healthy volunteers | Increased |
| Kumar et al. ( | 19 | 20 semen donors | Increased |
| Total | 47 | ||
| Gandini et al. ( | 30 | 23 healthy + 29 infertile | Increased vs. healthy |
| Spermon et al. ( | 22 | 13 healthy | Increased |
| Stahl et al. ( | 19 | 24 military | NOT increased |
| Ribeiro et al. ( | 48 | 50 healthy fertile | NOT increased |
| O'Flaherty et al. ( | 15 | 21 infertile + 21 healthy volunteers | Increased vs. healthy |
| Bujan et al. ( | 53 | 257 fertile | NOT increased |
| Total | 187 | ||
Post-treatment sperm DNA quality in testicular cancer patients subdivided by method used.
| Stahl et al. ( | 74 | 0, 6, 12, 24, 36, and 60 months | Chemo- and Radiotherapy | RT: increased DFI up to 2 years post-treatment; normalization after 3–5 years CH: reduced DFI up to 5 years post-treatment |
| Stahl et al. ( | 96 | 0, 6, 12, 24, 36, and 60 months | Chemo- and Radiotherapy | RT: increased DFI up to 2 years post-treatment; normalization after 3–5 years CH: reduced DFI up to 5 years post-treatment |
| Stahl et al. ( | 58 | Mean 3 years | Chemo- and Radiotherapy | No differences in DFI pre- and post- treatment—DNA not affected by treatment |
| Smit et al. ( | 52 | Range 0.5 to 3.3 years | Chemo- and Radiotherapy | RT: increased DFI against CH (mean 1.1 years) |
| O'Flaherty et al. ( | 16 | 0, 6, 12, 18, and 24 months | Chemotherapy | CH: increase in SD DFI and HDS inTC patients up to 24 months post-therapy. |
| Bujan et al. ( | 53 | 3, 6, 12, and 24 months | Chemo- and Radiotherapy | RT: reduced chromatin compaction to T6 post RT CH: no DFI variation pre- and post-CH |
| Paoli et al. ( | 254 | 3, 6, 9, 12, and 24 months | Chemo- and Radiotherapy | RT: increased DFI at 3 and 6 months, less marked reduction at 12 and 24 against CH CH: increased DFI at 3 and 6 months and reduction at 12–24 months |
| Stahl et al. ( | 96 | 0, 6, 12, 24, 36, and 60 months | Chemo- and Radiotherapy | RT: increased DFI up to 2 years post- treatment; normalization after 3–5 years CH: reduced DFI up to 5 years post-treatment |
| Spermon et al. ( | 22 | Range 18.4–84.8 months | Chemotherapy | Chromatin condensation improved after treatment DNA fragmentation not reduced after CH |
| Bujan et al. ( | 53 | 3, 6, 12, and 24 months | Chemo- and Radiotherapy | No change in sperm DNA fragmentation pre- and post-treatment |
| Ghezzi et al. ( | 212 | 0, 12, 24 months | 100 BEP 54 CARB 58 surveillance | BEP: at 12 and 24 months increased post therapy DNA damage both vs. baseline and vs. CARB. |
| O'Donovan ( | 13 | 0, 3, 6, 12 months | Various antineoplastic agents | Reduced percentage of intact sperm DNA and chromatin condensation |
| O'Flaherty et al. ( | 16 | 0, 6, 12, 18, and 24 months | Chemotherapy | Increased sperm DNA fragmentation 6 months post-treatment against T0, remaining elevated up to 18–24 months |
RT, radiotherapy; CH, chemotherapy; BEP, Bleomycin, etoposide, cisplatin; CARB, carboplatin.
Summary of available data from national registers/population studies on fertility in testicular cancer survivors.
| Fossa et al. ( | 5,173 | 972 | N/A | 1854 (35.8%) | 429 (23.1%) | 8 and 14% after 5 and 10 years | No increased risk |
| Syse et al. ( | 7,127 | 1,731 | N/A | 567 (7.9%) | N/A | OR 0.8 after 5 yearsb | N/A |
| Madanat et al. ( | 11,985 | 1,834 | N/A | 1,273 (10.6%) | 366 (28.7%) | RR 0.57 for first childc | N/A |
| Magelssen et al. ( | 463 | 142 | 8.4% | 211 (45.6%) | 72 (34.1%) | 42% 10 years post-diagnosisd | 27 cases reporteda OR = 1.8b |
| Stahl et al. ( | N/A | 8,670 | 5.9% | N/A | N/A | N/A | Increased risk RR = 1.17a |
| Stensheim et al. ( | 11,451 | 2,618 | 2.3% | 3,511 (30.7%) | 1,081 (30.8%) | HR 0.74a | N/A |
| Signorello et al. ( | 1,128e | 1,128e | N/A | None | N/A | N/A | 36 cases reported. no increased riska |
| Winther et al. ( | 722 | 722e | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | No increased riska |
| Stensheim et al. ( | 2,087 | 2,087e | 2.6% | 805 (38.6%) | N/A | N/A | No increased riska |
| Gunnes et al. ( | 2,687 | 1,087 | 3.0% | 734 (27.3%) | 349 (47.5%) | HR 0.77a | No increased riska |
Summary of available data from cohort studies on natural and ART fertility in testicular cancer survivors.
| Hartmann et al. ( | 98 | N/A | 98 | 39 (39.8%) | 21 (21.4%) | N/A | Median 54 months after treatment | None reported, 3 miscarriages |
| Kelleher et al. ( | 901 | 64 (7.7%) | 348 | N/A | N/A | N/A | Median 36 months | 3 cases reported |
| Spermon et al. ( | 226 | 226 | 93/120 (77.5%) | 54/88 (61.4%) | 8/88 (14.8%) | Median 46 months | None reported, 7 miscarriages | |
| Agarwal et al. ( | 31 | 12 (38.7%) | 11 | N/A | 8 (72.7%) | 6 (54.5%) | N/A | None reported, 4 miscarriages |
| Chung et al. ( | 164 | 6/127 (4.7%) | 42 | N/A | N/A | 1/3 (33.3%) | N/A | N/A |
| Huyghe et al. ( | 446 | 446 | 208/228 (91.2%) | 110/164 (67.1%) | 7/164 (6.4%) | Mean 4.8 ± 3.0 years | N/A | |
| Nalesnik et al. ( | 73 | 73 | N/A | 6/11 (54%) | N/A | N/A | None reported, 1 miscarriage | |
| Schmidt et al. ( | 67 | 34 (50.7%) | 34 | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | 7 miscarriages, 2 ectopic |
| Magelssen et al. ( | 1,388 | 1,388 | 693 (49.9%) | 513 (39.0%) | 29 (2.1%) | N/A | 2 spontaneous abortions after ART | |
| Girasole et al. ( | 129 | 129 | 65 (50.4%) | 28 (21.7%) | 2 (7.1%) | N/A | N/A | |
| Hourvitz et al. ( | 118 | 118 (100%) | 47 | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | 11 spontaneous abortions |
| van Casteren et al. ( | 629 | 18/37 (48.7%) | 236 | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | 2 early abortions after ART |
| Chra et al. ( | 619 | 28 (4.5%) | 270 | N/A | N/A | N/A | Median 18 months | N/A |
| Ping et al. ( | 1548 | 2/30 (6.7%) | 21 | N/A | 1/30 (3.3%) | 1/30 (3.3%) | N/A | N/A |
| Matos et al. ( | 297 | 297 | 98/119 (82.4%) | 74/150 (49.3%) | N/A | Median 12 years from diagnosis | N/A | |
| Freour et al. ( | 1042 | 82 (7.9%) | 438 | N/A | 2/27 (7.4%) | 2/27 (7.4%) | N/A | None reported |
| Bizet et al. ( | ||||||||
| Botchan et al. ( | 682 | 27/70 (38.6%) | 216 | N/A | N/A | 13/18 (72.2%) | 63% tried ART within 3 years | None reported, 4 abortions, 3 extra-uterine |
| Molnar et al. ( | 52 | 52 | N/A | 16 (30.8%) | 4/7 (57%) | N/A | 6 miscarriages reported | |
| Ping et al. ( | 117 | 117 | 21/69 (30.4%) | 35/73 (47.9%) | 19/73 (26.0%) | N/A | None reported, 4 miscarriages | |
| Zakova et al. ( | 523 | 16/34 (47%) | 523 | N/A | N/A | 16/34 (47%) | ART about 18 months after semen cryopreservation | N/A |
| Garcia et al. ( | 272 | 14/29 (48.2%) | 52 | N/A | N/A | 9 (17.3%) | N/A | N/A |
All types of cancer.
.
.
.
Only patients with children were selected.
Fatherhood achieved/patients who tried to conceive.
Only patients who cryopreserved their semen.
Patients with children 20 years after diagnosis.
Only 30 cancer patients.
Summary of evidence and future suggestions.
| Sperm DNA damage | Higher pre-treatment sperm DNA damage in TC patients in comparison with healthy, fertile controls but without significant differences between TC and infertile patients. Sperm DNA damage detected for up to 2 years after the end of the treatment. Such damage is more marked in advanced stages and is also influenced by the treatment type and dose. |
| Fatherhood chance | TC survivors resort to ART more frequently than the general population. ART, including the use of cryobanked sperm, has a success rate of around 50%, especially with more advanced techniques (ICSI). |
| Congenital anomalies | Most authors did not find any increased risk of major anomalies (congenital or genetic abnormalities, perinatal death, low birth weight, preterm birth) in the children of male cancer survivors treated with chemotherapy or radiotherapy. A few authors found an increased risk of congenital abnormalities, at their peak in children born within 2 years of their father's cancer diagnosis. Several authors reported miscarriages, but did not compare rates against cancer-free patients. |
| Future suggestions | Negative effects on sperm DNA structure which may affect the reproductive capacity of TC patients make adequate counseling essential before beginning any potentially genotoxic treatment. Clinicians should also discuss post-treatment fertility as well as sperm cryopreservation strategies and the possible future use of ART. More high quality studies with adequate follow ups are needed to confirm previous observations of sperm DNA damage. Further studies investigating the extent of this damage might identify the time needed for the germ cell line to repair nuclear damage and thus produce gametes with a reduced risk for the offspring. |