Abstract

BackgroundInfertility is a major concern for people with cancer and their partners. There have been calls for further research on the gendered nature of psychosocial, emotional and identity concomitants of fertility post-cancer across women and men.MethodThe gendered construction and experience of infertility following cancer was examined through a survey of 693 women and 185 men, and in-depth one-to-one interviews with a subsample of survey respondents, 61 women and 17 men, purposively selected across cancer types and age groups. Thematic decomposition was used to examine the open ended survey responses and interviews. The chi square test for independence was used to test for group differences between women and men on closed survey items.ResultsIn the thematic decomposition, infertility was identified as providing a ‘Threat of Biographical Disruption’ which impacted on life course and identity, for both women and men. Subthemes identified were: ‘Parenthood as central to adulthood’; ‘Infertility as a threat to gender identity’; ‘ Unknown fertility status and delayed parenthood’; ‘Feelings of loss and grief’; ‘Absence of understanding and support’; ‘Benefit finding and renegotiation of identity’. In the closed survey items, the majority of women and men agreed that they had always ‘wanted to be a parent’ and that ‘parenthood was a more important life goal than a satisfying career’. ‘It is hard to feel like a true adult until you have a child’ and impact upon ‘my feelings about myself as a man or a woman’ was reported by both women and men, with significantly more women reporting ‘I feel empty because of fertility issues’. Many participants agreed they ‘could visualise a happy life without a child’ and there is ‘freedom without children’. Significantly more men than women reported that they had not discussed fertility with a health care professional.ConclusionThe fear of infertility following cancer, or knowledge of compromised fertility, can have negative effects on identity and psychological wellbeing for both women and men, serving to create biographical disruption. Support from family, partners and health care professionals can facilitate renegotiation of identity and coping.

Highlights

  • Infertility is a major concern for people with cancer and their partners

  • In the thematic decomposition, infertility was identified as providing a ‘Threat of Biographical Disruption’ which impacted on life course and identity, for both women and men

  • Parenthood as central to adult identity Having a child was positioned as central to adult identity, with 25% (n = 137) of women and 32% (n = 42) of men who responded agreeing with survey item that “it is hard to feel like a true adult until you have a child” (FPI)

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Summary

Introduction

Infertility is a major concern for people with cancer and their partners. There have been calls for further research on the gendered nature of psychosocial, emotional and identity concomitants of fertility post-cancer across women and men. Infertility and cancer Fertility is one of the major concerns confronting people with cancer and their partners [1, 2], with infertility post-cancer being described as a “double trauma” [3], affecting between 25 and 60% of cancer survivors [4]. Infertility can be caused by the disease itself, or result from gonadal damage secondary to chemo-therapy, radio therapy, or from bone marrow transplantation [4, 11]. This can produce early menopause or uterine damage in women, or retrograde ejaculation and azoospermia in men [11], with survivors of childhood cancer being at risk of delayed pubertal growth [12]. Fertility preservation treatment failure or suboptimal response can lead to psychological distress, and loss of hope for future fertility [13]

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