Many childhood cancer survivors have uncomplicated pregnancies and healthy babies
Women who survived cancer in childhood or adolescence
or women whose male partner is a childhood cancer survivor do not appear to have
an increased risk of major complications during pregnancy, having babies with
birth defects or infant deaths, according to two reports in the October issue
of Archives of Pediatrics & Adolescent Medicine, one of the JAMA/Archives
journals. However, increased rates of preterm births and low birth weight-especially
among those with certain cancers or who received certain treatments-indicate that
these pregnancies and infants should be closely monitored.
Chemotherapy, radiation treatment and surgery for cancer
may affect the future reproduction of patients with childhood cancers, according
to background information in the articles. As the number of young cancer survivors
increases, identifying possible adverse outcomes among their offspring is a growing
concern.
In one article, Beth A. Mueller, P.H.D., of Fred Hutchinson
Cancer Research Center and the University of Washington, Seattle, and colleagues
used cancer registries to identify women who were diagnosed with cancer from 1973
through 2000, when they were younger than 20 years. They then used linked birth
records to find 1,898 infants born to these women after their cancer diagnoses.
These births were compared with 14,278 among women of the same age and race who
had babies the same year, but had not had cancer.
Infants born to childhood cancer survivors were not at
increased risk of birth defects or of death, but did have a 54 percent increased
risk of being born preterm and a 31 percent increased risk of weighing less than
2,500 grams. However, these infants were not at increased risk of being small
for gestational age, suggesting that size differences were not severe enough to
meet criteria for this designation.
The researchers also analyzed infant outcomes by the
type of cancer and treatments the mother had. "Risk of preterm delivery was greatest
after leukemia but also was associated with lymphoma, bone tumors, soft-tissue
sarcomas and an abdominal primary cancer site. Among treatment exposures, chemotherapy
was associated with a two-fold increased risk of preterm delivery, but relative
risks were significantly increased for most other modalities as well," they write.
Diabetes, preeclampsia and anemia occurred at similar
rates in all the women. However, when groups were stratified by diagnostic and
treatment characteristics, bone cancer survivors had an increased risk of diabetes,
anemia was increased among those with brain tumors and cancer survivors treated
with chemotherapy and a borderline higher risk for preeclampsia was observed among
women who were treated with a combination of chemotherapy, surgery and radiation.
"Children and adolescents with cancer can be reassured
that we did not find an increased risk of malformations or infant death among
their first subsequent offspring," the authors conclude. "The increased occurrence
of low birth weight and preterm delivery among childhood cancer survivors and
of preterm delivery among young genital tract carcinoma survivors that we and
others have observed may indicate relatively less severe potential problems among
offspring. However, these outcomes can still greatly affect families, are associated
with significantly increased costs and indicate a need for close monitoring of
pregnancies among childhood and adolescent cancer survivors."
In another report published in the same issue, Eric J.
Chow, M.D., M.P.H., also of Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, Seattle, and
the same group of colleagues used similar records to identify 470 offspring of
men diagnosed with childhood cancers between 1973 and 2000. A total of 4,150 comparison
fathers who were the same age and race/ethnicity and had babies born the same
year, but had not been diagnosed with cancer, also were studied.
Compared with infants born to men who were not cancer
survivors, offspring of men with cancer had a "borderline risk" of weighing less
than 2,500 grams at birth, especially if the father's cancer was diagnosed at
a younger age or was treated with chemotherapy. "However, they were not at risk
of being born prematurely, being small for gestational age, having malformations
or having an altered male to female ratio," the authors write.
"Overall, female partners of male survivors were not
more likely to have maternal complications recorded on birth records vs. the comparison
group," they continue. However, a higher risk of preeclampsia was associated with
some cancers, especially brain tumors.
"Most pregnancies resulting in live births among partners
of male childhood cancer survivors were not at significantly greater risk of complications
vs. comparison subjects," the authors conclude. "However, our findings of increased
low birth weight and preeclampsia associated with some diagnostic groups raises
the possibility that prior cancer therapy may affect male germ cells [cells that
will become sperm] with effects on female partners and progeny of male survivors."
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