Abstract

Cancer is not unusual neither incurable: in USA 85% of patients under 45 years diagnosed in 2002 survived more than 10 years. The highest survival rates occur in young patients with breast, testicular and hematologic cancer. However, these tumors are treated with drugs wich most affect fertility and there is evidence that the discussion of preserving fertility is of great importance. Moreover, hematologic and autoimmune diseases may also require the use of potentially gonadotoxic drugs for their control. The ethics committee of the American Society for Reproductive Medicine believes that “there are strong arguments for the preservation of fertility in young patients with treatable cancers”. It is up to the physician (oncologist, hematologist, surgeon, internist) to decide the best treatment to the patient evaluating the risk of ovarian/testicular failure; the prognosis and the timing to start treatments. Moreover, the specialist in reproductive medicine should develop strategies to preserve gametes/embryos according to: age; time to treatment; type of cancer; marital status and risk of infertility, with the proposed therapy. The ongoing collaboration between these specialists, including patients and partners in the discussion, is the key to making decisions that allow the preservation of reproductive function after control of the primary disease.

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