| Literature DB >> 35870095 |
L M Ataman1, M M Laronda2,3, M Gowett1, K Trotter1, H Anvari1, F Fei1, A Ingram1, M Minette1, C Suebthawinkul1, Z Taghvaei1, M Torres-Vélez1, K Velez1, S K Adiga4, A Anazodo5,6, L Appiah7, M T Bourlon8, N Daniels9, M M Dolmans10,11, C Finlayson12, R B Gilchrist6, V Gomez-Lobo13, E Greenblatt14, J A Halpern15, K Hutt16, E K Johnson15,17, K Kawamura18, M Khrouf19, D Kimelman20, S Kristensen21, R T Mitchell22, M B Moravek23,24, L Nahata25,26, K E Orwig27, M E Pavone28, D Pépin29, R Pesce30, G P Quinn31, M P Rosen32, E Rowell33, K Smith28, C Venter34, S Whiteside35, S Xiao36, M Zelinski37, K N Goldman1, T K Woodruff38, F E Duncan39.
Abstract
Since 2007, the Oncofertility Consortium Annual Conference has brought together a diverse network of individuals from a wide range of backgrounds and professional levels to disseminate emerging basic and clinical research findings in fertility preservation. This network also developed enduring educational materials to accelerate the pace and quality of field-wide scientific communication. Between 2007 and 2019, the Oncofertility Consortium Annual Conference was held as an in-person event in Chicago, IL. The conference attracted approximately 250 attendees each year representing 20 countries around the world. In 2020, however, the COVID-19 pandemic disrupted this paradigm and precluded an in-person meeting. Nevertheless, there remained an undeniable demand for the oncofertility community to convene. To maintain the momentum of the field, the Oncofertility Consortium hosted a day-long virtual meeting on March 5, 2021, with the theme of "Oncofertility Around the Globe" to highlight the diversity of clinical care and translational research that is ongoing around the world in this discipline. This virtual meeting was hosted using the vFairs ® conference platform and allowed over 700 people to participate, many of whom were first-time conference attendees. The agenda featured concurrent sessions from presenters in six continents which provided attendees a complete overview of the field and furthered our mission to create a global community of oncofertility practice. This paper provides a synopsis of talks delivered at this event and highlights the new advances and frontiers in the fields of oncofertility and fertility preservation around the globe from clinical practice and patient-centered efforts to translational research.Entities:
Keywords: Cancer; Fertility preservation; Oncofertility
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35870095 PMCID: PMC9307970 DOI: 10.1007/s10815-022-02570-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Assist Reprod Genet ISSN: 1058-0468 Impact factor: 3.357
A list of all Oncofertility Conference themes and titles since 2012. 2012 marked the year the Oncofertility Conference expanded from Roadmap UL1 project PIs to include all oncofertility stakeholders from around the globe. From 2007 to 2011, the annual meeting was an opportunity for Roadmap PIs to convene, but in 2012, the focus shifted to include external stakeholders
| Year(s) | Conference title | General theme(s) |
|---|---|---|
| 2007–2011 | Oncofertility Conference: Annual Meeting of Roadmap PIs | |
| 2012 | Dialogues in Oncofertility | Research advances |
| 2013 | Fertility and Cancer Around the Globe | Global oncofertility practice |
| 2014 | Bench to Bedside: Oncofertility Advances in Males and Females | Males |
| 2015 | Critical Conversations in Oncofertility: Pediatrics and Beyond | Pediatrics |
| 2016 | Expanding Access to Emerging and Existing Oncofertility Services | Low/no resource environments, genetics, and education |
| 2017 | Research and Translational Medicine: Meeting the Needs of Cancer Patients and Survivors | Pregnancy and cancer, sexual health, and quality of life issues |
| 2018 | Bridging the Gaps in Oncofertility Research and Clinical Care: A Global Initiative | Translational research |
| 2019 | Pediatric Oncofertility: At the Intersection of Oncology Care and Fertility Preservation in Pediatric Populations | Pediatrics |
| 2020 | ||
| 2021 | Oncofertility Around the Globe | Global advances in fertility preservation |
A list of all speakers, their academic rank, institution, county, and presentation topic. 38 speakers from 17 countries presented at the Oncofertility Around the Globe virtual meeting
| Speaker information | Presentation title |
|---|---|
Assistant Professor Northwestern University, USA | Welcome/Moderator |
Program Administrator Northwestern University, USA | Welcome/Moderator |
Ekocorp Plc (Eko Hospitals), Nigeria | Oncofertility in Nigeria: Situation Report |
Associate Professor Fertillia ART, Tunisia | Building the Oncofertility Consortium in Africa |
Vitalab, South Africa | Tracing the Oncofertility Consortium’s Footprint in South Africa |
Professor Kasturba Medical College, India | Access to Fertility Preservation Care in India |
Associate Professor St. Marianna University School of Medicine, Japan | In vitro Activation (IVA) for Oncofertility |
Professor Shanghai JiaoTong University, China | Applying Urinary Bladder Matrix Scaffold to Improve the Efficiency of Ovarian Tissue Transplantation |
Professor Université Catholique de Louvain, Belgium | Ovarian Tissue Cryopreservation and Live Births |
Senior Research Scientist University Hospital of Copenhagen, Denmark | Ovarian Tissue Cryopreservation and Aging |
Professor University of Edinburgh, UK | Fertility Preservation in Prepubertal Boys with Cancer – Testicular Transplantation as a Future Clinical Application |
Associate Professor University of Colorado, USA | Reproductive Late Effects in Adolescents |
Professor Instituto Nacional de Ciencias Médicas y Nutrición Salvador Zubirán, Mexico | Current Status of Oncofertility in Mexico |
Fertility Panama, Panama | Implementing a Pro-Bono Oncofertility Program in Panama |
Assistant Professor Lurie Children’s Hospital, USA | Fertility Potential and Preservation in DSD: Endocrinology Perspective |
Assistant Professor Northwestern University, USA | Pathways to Fertoprotection |
Professor NICHD, USA | Fertility Preservation and Special Populations |
Professor Mount Sinai Fertility, Canada | Oncofertility in Canada: Current Landscape |
Assistant Professor Northwestern University, USA | A Practical Approach to Fertility Preservation in the Male Cancer Patient |
Assistant Professor Lurie Children’s Hospital, USA | Fertility Potential and Preservation in DSD: Surgical Perspective |
Assistant Professor Lurie Children’s Hospital, USA | Engineering the Microenvironment that will Enable a Bioprosthetic Ovary |
Associate Professor University of Michigan, USA | Fertility Preservation in Gender Diverse Patients |
Associate Professor Nationwide Children’s Hospital, USA | Advances in Pediatric Oncofertility: Contributions of the Pediatric Initiative Network |
Professor University of Pittsburgh, USA | Stem Cell and Tissue Transplant Therapies for Male Infertility |
Associate Professor Northwestern University, USA | Egg Vitrification in Adolescents: Considerations for a Unique Patient Population |
Assistant Professor Massachusetts General Hospital, USA | Mechanisms of uterine and ovarian protection from chemotherapy by AMH/MIS |
Professor New York University, USA | Ethical Issues and Decisions in Fertility Preservation |
Professor University of California-San Francisco, USA | Random start protocols, ovarian stimulation in FP |
Associate Professor Lurie Children’s Hospital, USA | Pediatric Ovarian Tissue Cryopreservation: From OR to Cryo |
Patient Navigator Northwestern University, USA | Patient Navigation |
Patient Navigator Nationwide Children’s Hospital, USA | Patient Navigation |
Professor Michigan State University, USA | Closing Remarks |
Assistant Professor Rutgers University, USA | Ovarian Toxicities of Doxorubicin |
Professor Oregon Health Sciences University, USA | Functional Evaluation of Ovarian Tissue Cryopreserved by Vitrification in Nonhuman Primates |
Associate Professor Future Fertility, Australia | The Development and Evaluation of a Reproductive Survivorship Patient Reported Outcome Measure |
Professor University of New South Wales Sydney, Australia | Application of In Vitro Maturation in Fertility Preservation |
Associate Professor Monash University, Australia | Mechanisms of Ovarian Damage |
Professor Universidade Estadual do Ceará, Brazil | Approaches to Improve the Efficiency of In Vitro Survival, Growth and Maturation of Oocytes using Animal Models (ruminants) |
Universidad de la República de Uruguay, Uruguay | Translational Oncofertility Research |
Assistant Professor Hospital Italiano de Buenos Aires, Argentina | Oncofertility Perspectives from Argentina |
Fig. 1Graphs illustrating the growth of the conference in terms of A number of participants and B numbers of countries represented. The number of countries represented is based on self-reported registration information. The change to a virtual format increased overall participation and accessibility. (Note there was no conference in 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic.)
Fig. 2A map of countries represented by attendees at the 2021 Oncofertility Around the Globe meeting
Fig. 3Graphs illustrating the self-reported demographic data from conference attendees from 2012–2021 including A race and B ethnicity/origin. All data was self-reported and collected at the time of conference registration. Race and ethnicity were not required fields on the data registration form. Percentages are calculated based on individuals who completed these fields on their registrations. Calculations were based on the following number of responses per year: 2012: 97; 2013: 112; 2014: 151; 2015: 186; 2016: 219; 2017: 204; 2018: 200; 2019: 231; 2021: 663