Abstract
e11541 Background: Chemotherapy improves breast cancer outcome, but may impact fertility. Post chemotherapy fertility rates range between 10–90% among studies. Fertility post chemotherapy is most often assessed by rate of menstruation resumption- an indirect method of evaluating childbearing potential. It is noteworthy that future pregnancy is a woman's first concern not menses preservation. Variability in fertility rates along with limited data on post chemotherapy pregnancies led us to undertake this single institute retrospective study evaluating fertility and pregnancy post chemotherapy in ≤ 38 y old breast cancer patients. Methods: We reviewed medical records of 222 consecutive stage II-IIIB breast cancer patients diagnosed, treated and followed at Sharette Institute of Hadassah-Hebrew University Medical Center from 1990–2004. Inclusion criteria included age ≤ 38 years, ≥3 cycles of standard metothrexate or adriamycine based chemotherapy, metastasis-free 12 months post chemotherapy initiation or one year following GnRH analog withdrawal. Patients diagnosed with infertility prior to breast cancer diagnosis (data present for part of patients), bilateral oophorectomy or patients surviving ≤3 years from diagnosis were excluded. Patient pregnancy preference was not recorded. Fertility was defined as resumption of recurrent menses or pregnancy anytime during follow up. In case of recurrence, date of recurrence diagnosis was assigned as date of last follow up. Results: Cohort included 65 patients. Mean age 32.5±4 ys (20.3–38.5) Almost all patients (95.4%), 38 ys or younger, preserve menses following chemotherapy, and 33.9% become pregnant. Most of patients who did not conceive post chemotherapy (66.1%), were under a familial status not promoting pregnancy; 44% of all women who did not give birth post chemotherapy had at least 3 offspring at the time of diagnosis and 83% out of all women who did not have any offspring by the end of follow up were single. Conclusions: This data suggest that pregnancy potential may be even higher than our actual finding, since pregnancy is most probably not attempted by multiparous or most single patients, whom cultural constrains affect their decisions. It seems prudent to offer the subgroup of unmarried women fertility preservation. No significant financial relationships to disclose.
Published Version
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