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Doctors hesitant to discuss options to preserve fertility with cancer patients Print E-mail
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Medical Articles - Cancer (Oncology)
Wednesday, 19 November 2008

Medical Research News

Although some teenagers and young adults become infertile following cancer treatment, physicians are hesitant to discuss options to preserve fertility with patients, according to a new Florida study.

In their discussions with 24 pediatric oncologists, researchers at the Moffitt Cancer Center found that some physicians did not wish to bring up the topic for fear of worrying their patients about the expense of egg and sperm storage. Other doctors cited a lack of appropriate resources and guidelines to help their patients with this hard decision.

Several doctors said they felt the topic was not one to bring up when patients' and their parents' primary concern was surviving cancer, noted study co-authors Gwendolyn Quinn, Ph.D., and Susan Vadaparampil, Ph.D.

Their study appears online in the Journal of Adolescent Health.

"About half of the physicians said the cancer diagnosis is such a shock that an issue like fertility is frequently put on the back burner," Quinn said.

Talking with young cancer patients about fertility can be a challenge, in part thanks to physicians are used to speaking with teens in a "jocular manner" in an attempt to "easiness the pain of an ill child," the researchers found. Yet, this manner of speaking might not be the best way to broach the sensitive topic of fertility with the patients, they said.

Moreover, the parents of children with cancer "tend to be more focused on treatment options and survival, and discussions of fertility frequently do not arise," the researchers noted.

Physicians who participated in the study "commented that the discussion could be awkward thanks to the parents and the patient are essentially discussing reproduction and sexuality, with parents making decisions about the reproductive future of their child," Quinn said.

Many physicians interviewed for the study said they did not bring up egg or sperm banking thanks to patients and their families generally pay for such procedures out of pocket. As one doctor said, "Our policy is that we offer them the possibility of banking, but since it is not paid for by insurance, it is expensive and a big hassle for them, and they frequently end up not doing it."

Still, the study authors point to surveys suggesting that patients do not see cost as a barrier, at least for sperm banking. National nonprofit organizations like FertileHope offer fertility preservation discounts to cancer patients and, "perhaps more importantly, the American Society of Clinical Oncologists suggests all patients should be informed about these options," Quinn said.

The 2006 ASCO guidelines acknowledge that the first visit after a patient's diagnosis might not be the best time to talk about fertility preservation, but they recommend that the discussion take place "at the initial possible opportunity."

"It may be impossible for physicians to know how weighty fertility preservation is to their patients unless they ask, since many patients may not bring up the topic," said Kutluk Oktay, M.D., the medical director of the Institute for Fertility Preservation at the Center for Human Reproduction, who worked on the 2006 guidelines.

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