Long-term antimüllerian hormone patterns differ by cancer treatment exposures in young breast cancer survivors.

Fertil Steril

Division of Reproductive Endocrinology and Infertility, Department of Obstetrics, Gynecology and Reproductive Sciences, University of California, San Diego, California; Moores Cancer Center, University of California, San Diego, California. Electronic address:

Published: May 2022

AI Article Synopsis

  • This study analyzed antimüllerian hormone (AMH) levels in females aged 15-39 who were diagnosed with breast cancer between 2005 and 2019.
  • A comparison was made between those who received different types of chemotherapy (cyclophosphamide-based, non-cyclophosphamide-based, and no chemotherapy) and matched females without cancer.
  • The results showed distinct AMH patterns: while levels declined linearly in non-cancerous females and breast cancer survivors without chemotherapy, those who received chemotherapy exhibited an initial drop in AMH followed by fluctuations over several years, indicating ovarian toxicity from the treatments.

Article Abstract

Objective: To compare antimüllerian hormone (AMH) patterns by cancer status and treatment exposures across 6 years after incident breast cancer using administrative data.

Design: In a cross-sectional design, AMH levels in patients who developed incident breast cancer between ages 15-39 years during 2005-2019 were matched 1:10 to levels in females without cancer in the OptumLabs Data Warehouse. Modeled AMH patterns were compared among cyclophosphamide-based chemotherapy, non-cyclophosphamide-based chemotherapy, no chemotherapy, and no breast cancer groups.

Setting: Commercially insured females in the United States.

Patient(s): Females with and without breast cancer.

Exposure(s): Breast cancer, cyclophosphamide- and non-cyclophosphamide-based chemotherapy.

Main Outcome Measure(s): AMH levels.

Result(s): A total of 233 patients with breast cancer (mean age, 34 years; standard deviation, 3.7 years) contributed 278 AMH levels over a median of 2 years (range, 0-6.7 years) after diagnosis; 52% received cyclophosphamide-based chemotherapy, 17% received non-cyclophosphamide-based chemotherapy (80% platinum-based), and 31% received no chemotherapy. A total of 2,777 matched females without cancer contributed 2,780 AMH levels. The pattern of AMH levels differed among the 4 groups. Among females without cancer and breast cancer survivors who did not undergo chemotherapy, AMH declined linearly over time. In contrast, among those who received cyclophosphamide-based and noncyclophosphamide-based chemotherapy, a nonlinear pattern of AMH level of initial fall during chemotherapy, followed by an increase over 2-4 years, and then by a plateau over 1-2 years before a decline was observed.

Conclusion(s): In breast cancer survivors, AMH levels from administrative data supported ovarian toxicity of non-cyclophosphamide-based chemotherapy in breast cancer and efficiently depicted the timing and duration of changes in ovarian reserve to reflect the residual reproductive lifespan.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9081208PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.fertnstert.2022.01.016DOI Listing

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