Objective: To assess the utilisation of and funding structure for fertility preservation for children diagnosed with cancer in the UK.
Design: Survey of paediatric oncologists/haematologists. Questionnaires were sent electronically with reminder notifications to non-responders.
This paper provides a summary of the areas of survival from childhood, teenage and young adult cancers and the significant late effects that can arise from treatment; with particular focus on the area of reproductive health and the impact on both fertility and pregnancy. To complete this review, Web of Science and MEDLINE were used. Search terms included: ""survival AND childhood OR teenage OR young adult cancer", "late effects", "childhood cancer", "teenage AND/OR young adult cancer", AND "fertility after cancer" OR "pregnancy AND cancer" OR "fertility preservation".
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFertility preservation is a developing area of reproductive biology and successes in adult populations has led to an emerging interest in prepubertal populations. Advances in treatment strategies for many disease processes including childhood cancer means that many patients now survive their initial diagnosis. Ovarian insufficiency is a recognized side-effect of chemotherapy and as such advances in reproductive technologies are now possible to attempt to overcome the so called late effects.
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