Abstract

BackgroundFuture infertility is a significant concern for survivors of childhood and adolescent cancer. Children and adolescents may have the opportunity to undergo fertility preservation (FP) procedures (which preserve gonadal tissue or gametes for future use) prior to the cancer treatment. However, the decision is very complex, as it is often made by parents as proxy decision makers at the time of cancer diagnosis, and is time-sensitive (needing to occur before the cancer treatment begins). Furthermore, FP procedures in children and adolescents are experimental and cannot guarantee future fertility. An uninformed decision may result in future decision regret.ObjectiveThis study aimed to assess the acceptability, usability, and feasibility of a Web-based FP decision aid (DA) in parents of children and adolescents with cancer and clinicians. Fertility knowledge and decision regret were compared in families who reviewed the DA compared with those who did not.MethodsThe Web-based DA was developed according to the International Patient Decision Aid Standards. A cross-sectional study of parents of patients with cancer, who discussed fertility, and clinicians at a tertiary children’s hospital was undertaken. The acceptability, usability, and feasibility of the DA were assessed using a pre-post survey design. Measures included the validated Decision Regret Scale, a purpose-designed fertility-related knowledge scale, questions regarding satisfaction with the DA, and open-ended responses for additional feedback. Furthermore, clinicians involved in FP were also invited to review the DA.ResultsWe enrolled 34 parents and 11 clinicians in this study. Participants who reviewed the DA (15 parents and 11 clinicians) expressed satisfaction with its content and functionality. Parents reported an improved understanding of cancer treatments, infertility, and FP procedures and did not report greater decision regret after DA review. Most parents (13/15, 86%) would recommend the DA to other parents. All clinicians had a consensus that this was a valid and relevant information source for all involved in fertility care.ConclusionsIt is an international standard of care to discuss the impact of cancer treatment on fertility before cancer treatment. This is the first fertility DA for parents of children and adolescents with cancer and is found to be relevant and acceptable by parents and clinicians. This DA has the potential to help support parents to make informed fertility-related decisions for their children and adolescents. However, future research is needed to assess the impact of the DA on prospective decision making.

Highlights

  • Australia has one of the highest incidences of childhood cancer worldwide, with >1500 children (0-12 years) and adolescent-young-adult patients (13-25 years) newly diagnosed annually [1,2]

  • Parents reported an improved understanding of cancer treatments, infertility, and fertility preservation (FP) procedures and did not report greater decision regret after decision aid (DA) review

  • All clinicians had a consensus that this was a valid and relevant information source for all involved in fertility care. It is an international standard of care to discuss the impact of cancer treatment on fertility before cancer treatment

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Summary

Introduction

Australia has one of the highest incidences of childhood cancer worldwide, with >1500 children (0-12 years) and adolescent-young-adult patients (13-25 years) newly diagnosed annually [1,2]. Attention must be given to the late effects of cancer diagnosis and treatment in this growing population of survivors [2]. The risk to fertility is variable and difficult to exactly predict [9,10]. For some patients, this risk is negligible; for others, infertility may be almost certain [8,9]. Future infertility is a significant concern for survivors of childhood and adolescent cancer. Children and adolescents may have the opportunity to undergo fertility preservation (FP) procedures (which preserve gonadal tissue or gametes for future use) prior to the cancer treatment. FP procedures in children and adolescents are experimental and cannot guarantee future fertility.

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