New table enables physicians
to predict when a woman treated with pelvic or abdominal radiation
as treatment for cancer may become sterile
A new table developed in the United Kingdom
enables physicians to predict when a woman treated with pelvic or
abdominal radiation as treatment for cancer may become sterile,
according to an article in the July issue of the International Journal
of Radiation Oncology*Biology*Physics.
Radiation therapy to the abdominal and pelvic regions in children
and adolescents may potentially expose the ovaries to radiation
and cause premature ovarian failure. Although their window of opportunity
to become pregnant may be smaller, receiving radiation therapy does
not preclude patients from natural conception and a successful pregnancy.
The researchers developed a formula that takes into account the
age of the patient at the time of treatment, the number of premature
eggs present at the time of treatment, and the dose of radiation
received to determine a window of fertility and at what age the
woman may experience ovarian failure.
With the help of modern three-dimensional radiation therapy planning,
clinicians are able to determine how much radiation the ovaries
are exposed to and using the method they developed, the doctors
would be able to determine a window of roughly 7.6 years for when
a woman could expect to become infertile. The exact window of opportunity
will vary from patient to patient.
“Our research has made it possible for doctors to predict when
a young woman who has been successfully treated for cancer will
develop ovarian failure,” said Hamish Wallace, MD, lead author of
the study and Senior Lecturer at the University of Edinburgh and
a children's cancer specialist at the Royal Hospital for Sick Children
in Edinburgh, Scotland.
“This will allow doctors to treat them with hormone replacement
therapy and prevent osteoporosis and other disabling symptoms of
the menopause. This knowledge will also guide patients and doctors
to their future window of opportunity to have a baby. For those
young women who are at risk of a very early menopause, it is now
possible to counsel them of the options currently available to preserve
their fertility before their treatment starts.”
“We acknowledge this is a predictive model based on pre-clinical
work and does not take into account the current use of combined
modality treatments in pediatric and adolescent cancer survivors,”
said Frank Saran, MD, a coauthor of the study and Consultant Clinical
Oncologist and Honorary Senior Lecturer at Royal Marsden NHS Trust
Foundation in Sutton, United Kingdom. “We hope this enables doctors
to confidently counsel women on their reproductive potential following
the successful treatment of their cancer.”
“This information can be used either to vary the treatment - so
that less radiation is received by the ovary - or possibly commence
freezing of ovarian tissue, which is a new technique that potentially
enables fertility after serious damage to the ovaries,” said Tom
W. Kelsey, B.Sc., M.Sc., Ph.D., coauthor of the study and a computer
scientist at University of St. Andrews in Scotland. “Our results
are exciting and useful, and further data is needed to improve the
accuracy of our methods.”
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