Transcript
Page 1: Fertility issues for patients with lymphoma

Cheryl FitzgeraldDept of Reproductive Medicine

St Mary’s HospitalManchester

Fertility issues for patients with lymphoma

Page 2: Fertility issues for patients with lymphoma

Issues to consider

• Two diagnoses– Malignancy and infertility– Counselling

• Delay in conception– Marked decline in female fertility 35 onwards

• Effect of disease/treatment– Spermatogenesis– Ovary – oocytes– Uterus – radiotherapy induced damage

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Issues affecting fertility

• Delay in conception – female

• Disease

• Surgery

• Chemotherapy

• Radiotherapy

• Long term prognosis – Welfare of Child

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• Male

• Options - easy

• Female

• Options complex

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Men

• Men and postpubertal boys

• Need to screen for Hep B, Hep C and HIV

• Urgent direct referral

• Phone Andrology SMH – 276 6473

• Produce single (?more) sample

• Frozen in several ampoules

• Stored for up to 55 years

• Sperm used for insemination or IVF

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Options for treatment with cryopreserved sperm

• Sperm quality good – use for insemination

• Sperm quality poor – use for IVF

• Treatment within NHS dependent upon NHS assisted conception guidelines

• Sperm can be transferred to private sector is not eligible

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Delay in conception - females

Initial treatmentLong term therapy (breast)Time until “cure”

• Age related decline in female fecundity• Age related decline in ovarian reserve• Increase in oocyte aneuploidy• Marked reduction 35 onwards

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Effects of chemotherapy

• Damage to primordial follicles• Damage to primary follicles• Oogenesis – many months

• May be temporary disruption

• No benefit from GnRH agonist treatment

• No effect on uterus

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Risk factors for iatrogenic POF

• Older women – poor ovarian reserve

• Dose, type and duration of chemotherapy

• Pelvic radiotherapy / TBI

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Effects of radiotherapy

• Site specific • Pelvic radiotherapy / TBI

– profound oocyte damage– profound uterine damage

• Oocyte damage– Premature ovarian failure

• Uterine damage– Poor implantation rates after XRT– Poor pregnancy outcome after XRT

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Fertility preservation options – pre-treatment

• Cryoprserve ovarian tissue

• Cryopreserve oocytes

• Cryopreserve embryos

• Consider uterine function

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Ovarian cryopreservation

• Laparoscopic oophorectomy

• Ovarian cortex frozen in strips

• Later – replace ovarian tissue within pelvis

• Spontaneous/stimulated ovarian cycle

• ?? In vitro maturation in the future

• 10 (+2) babies worldwide

• No time limit on storage

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Ovarian storage

• Risks• Very low success

rates• Risk of laparoscopy• Risk of re-introducing

disease

• Benefits• No need for

hyperstimulation• No raised oestradiol

level• No need for partner• Minimal delay in

treatment

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Who is suitable?

Lymphoma patients

Very young girls ?? Prepubertal

No metastatic disease in ovaries

Limited time

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Primordial follicle grafting

• Stored ovarian tissue

• Primordial follicles grafted into mice

• No need to transplant tissue

Ref. Brison et al

Not published

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Egg and embryo freezing

• Need to retrieve mature eggs from ovaries

• No stimulation – single egg – poor success

• Need for ovarian hyperstimulation

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Ovarian hyperstimulation cycle

• 10 days of ovarian stimulation – starts with period

• NB – delay caused by waiting for menses

• Vaginal egg recovery

• Ostradiol raised through stimulation

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Oocyte cryopreservation

• problematic

• chromosomes on spindle

• aneuploidy after thaw

• zona pellucida and cortical

granule damage

affect fertilisation

• need for ICSI

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Oocyte cryopreservation

• Freeze all mature eggs recovered

• Can be stored for 55 years– HFEA Code of Practice 8

• No reduction in “quality” of eggs with increasing time

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Oocyte cryopreservation - progress

• Improving ++ vitrification

• Rapid cooling without crystal formation

VitrificationSlow freeze

• Survival 80% 60%

• Fertilisation 75% 65%

• Pregnancy 9% 4%

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Safety of egg freezing

• 936 babies

• Birth anomalies – 1.3%

• No difference compared to spontaneously conceived children

• Noyes et al 2009

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Embryo cryopreservation

• need a partner

• “urgent” IVF

• minimum time 4-6 weeks

• ovarian hyperstimulation

• oocyte recovery

• eggs inseminated

• embryos created frozen

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Risks associated with “urgent” IVF for egg or embryo cryopreservation

• high circulating oestradiol (20 000 cf 500 pmol/l) – issue with Ca breast

• potential seeding of gynae malignancies

• delay in cancer treatment

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Egg and embryo cryopreservation

• Risks– High circulating

oestradiol– Delay to treatment– Need for partner

(embryos)– Risk that partner will

“change mind” (embryos)

• Benefits– Successful– Proven method– Proven safety

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Chance of baby – embryo freeze

• HFEA data – livebirth per fresh cycle 2008• <35 years 32.8%• 35-37 years 27.3%• 38-39 years 19.0%• 40-42 years 11.8%• 43-44 years 4.8%• >44 years 3.8%• 30% embryo loss with freezing

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Embryo freezing

• Freeze all embryos created at pronucleate stage

• Can be stored for 55 years

• No reduction in “quality” of embryos with increased time in storage

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Practicalities

• Urgency – referral early

• Fax referral and confirm by phone

• Cycle control – COCP – limits delay

• Details– Timing of chemo– Need for pelvic radiotherapy– Longterm therapies– Prognosis

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After treatment

• Referred as any infertility patient

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Egg donation

• Donor – IVF stimulation

• Partner sperm for insemination

• Embryo(s) replaced in recipient

• HRT support to 12 weeks of pregnancy

• Success rates – 30-50%

• Right of child to access donor information

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Surrogacy

• After hysterectomy / pelvic radiotherapy

• Problematic +++

• No legal contract

• Surrogate – legal mother

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Eligibility – IVF in NHS

• NHS IVF guidelines– Female < 40 years– Stable cohabitation >2 years– One partner childless– Only couples treated– Female BMI< 30– No previous sterilisation

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Fertility preservation eligibility - NHS

• Female age ? • Cohabitation - ? • One partner childless• Single women treated• BMI ? • No previous sterilisation

• NB – PCT funding – needs agreement

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Welfare of the Child

• Legal requirement

• HFEA Act

• Prognosis for patient important

• Partner / family support

Page 34: Fertility issues for patients with lymphoma

Thank-you


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