Advertisement

Fertility Preservation Measures Do Not Appear to Increase the Risk of Breast Cancer Recurrence


Advertisement
Get Permission

Women with a breast cancer diagnosis undergoing procedures for fertility preservation are not at an increased risk for recurrence of the disease or disease-specific mortality, according to the results of a study from the Karolinska Institutet in Sweden that followed participants for 5 years on average. The findings were published by Marklund et al in JAMA Oncology.

Almost 1 in 10 women affected by breast cancer are of childbearing age and are at risk of becoming infertile from chemotherapy treatment. With the hope of being able to have children after completing cancer treatment, many women choose to undergo procedures for fertility preservation with or without hormonal stimulation. These methods include cryopreservation—the freezing of embryos, female gametes (oocytes), and ovarian tissue.

“It is not unusual that women with hormone-positive breast cancer or their treating doctors opt out of the procedures for fertility preservation because of the fear that these procedures will increase the risk of cancer recurrence or death. In some cases, women are also advised to wait 5 to 10 years before trying to conceive, and with increasing age, fecundity in all women decreases. More knowledge is therefore needed about the safety of procedures for fertility preservation at the time of a breast cancer diagnosis,” said the study’s first author, Anna Marklund, MD, PhD, a researcher in the Department of Oncology-Pathology at the Karolinska Institutet.

Study Details

In this study, researchers at the Karolinska Institutet and Karolinska University Hospital investigated whether procedures for fertility preservation in connection with a breast cancer diagnosis entail an increased risk of disease recurrence or death. The study followed the women for 5 years on average.

KEY POINTS

  • The proportion of women without relapse over the 5 years was 89% among those who underwent hormonal stimulation of the ovaries, 83% among women with ovarian tissue freezing, and 82% among women who did not undergo procedures for fertility preservation.
  • Five years after treatment for breast cancer, the survival rate was 96% in the group that underwent hormonal stimulation to freeze eggs or embryos, 93% in the group that underwent procedures for fertility preservation who did not undergo hormone stimulation, and 90% in the group that did not undergo procedures for fertility preservation.

The registry study covered 1,275 women of childbearing age who were treated for breast cancer between 1994 and 2017 in Sweden. Of these, 425 underwent procedures for fertility preservation with or without hormonal stimulation. The control group of 850 women were treated for breast cancer but did not undergo procedures for fertility preservation.

The women who underwent procedures for fertility preservation and the women in the control group were matched on age at diagnosis, calendar period at diagnosis, and health-care region. The statistical data were taken from both nationwide health-care registers and population registers with data on outcomes, disease- and treatment-related variables, and socioeconomic characteristics.

Results

The proportion of women without relapse over the 5 years was 89% among those who underwent hormonal stimulation of the ovaries, 83% among women with ovarian tissue freezing, and 82% among women who did not undergo procedures for fertility preservation.

Five years after treatment for breast cancer, the survival rate was 96% in the group that underwent hormonal stimulation to freeze eggs or embryos, 93% in the group that underwent procedures for fertility preservation who did not undergo hormone stimulation, and 90% in the group that did not undergo procedures for fertility preservation.

“We did not see any increased risk of relapse or mortality when procedures for fertility preservation were undertaken, compared to the women who did not undergo procedures for fertility preservation. This is valuable information that can contribute to changed care routines when it comes to young women with breast cancer who want to preserve their fertility,” said senior study author Kenny Rodriguez-Wallberg, MD, PhD, Adjunct Professor and Research Group Leader in the Department of Oncology-Pathology, Karolinska Institutet, and Chief Physician at Karolinska University Hospital.

The researchers plan to follow up on the results after another 5 years.

Disclosure: The study was funded by the Swedish Cancer Society, Radiumhemmet's Research Funds, the Breast Cancer Association, Region Stockholm, and Karolinska Institutet. For full disclosures of the study authors, visit jamanetwork.com.

The content in this post has not been reviewed by the American Society of Clinical Oncology, Inc. (ASCO®) and does not necessarily reflect the ideas and opinions of ASCO®.
Advertisement

Advertisement




Advertisement