AI Article Synopsis

  • Cryopreservation of ovarian tissue is utilized to help preserve fertility in women undergoing chemotherapy for conditions like hematologic malignancies, with standardized clinical and laboratory guidelines being necessary for the procedure.
  • A study evaluated 56 patients, revealing various types of cancers, and indicated that ovarian tissue can be harvested even after some patients have already undergone chemotherapy.
  • Successful fertility restoration was noted through ovarian tissue transplantation or fertility treatments, prompting the need for individualized approaches regarding when and how much ovarian tissue should be banked, alongside careful management to avoid loss of ovarian function.

Article Abstract

Cryopreservation of ovarian tissue is currently practiced in an attempt to preserve fertility before commencing potentially sterilizing chemotherapy. Clinical and laboratory guidelines are needed to standardize the procedure. Over the last 10 years ovarian tissue was stored in female patients with hematologic malignancies. Patients' records and consultation charts were evaluated, surgical and laboratory reports were revised and ovarian histology was investigated. Fifty-six patients with hematologic malignancies (age 24 +/- 5.5) had cryopreserved ovarian tissue. Thirty-three patients had Hodgkin's disease, 14 non-Hodgkin's lymphoma, 6 acute leukemia, and 3 chronic myelocytic leukemia. Harvesting of ovarian tissue was also performed following previous exposure to chemotherapy (33 patients), 13 of them shortly after the chemotherapy. Partial oophorectomy was the preferred surgical procedure. Fertility was restored with ovarian tissue transplantation in a sterilized patient and following fertility treatment in a patient with very low ovarian reserve. We recommend that indications and timing of ovarian tissue banking should be individualized. Patients previously exposed to chemotherapy can consider ovarian tissue freezing. The extent of tissue removed should take into account the large number of follicles lost and the risk of future sterilization. Tissue handling should enable further investigation of primordial follicles and identification of cancer cells.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/10428190701471957DOI Listing

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