Human Ovarian Cortex biobanking: A Fascinating Resource for Fertility Preservation in Cancer.
Erica SilvestrisGiuseppe De PalmaStefano CanosaSimone PaliniMiriam DellinoAlberto RevelliAngelo Virgilio ParadisoPublished in: International journal of molecular sciences (2020)
Novel anti-cancer treatments have improved the survival rates of female young patients, reopening pregnancy issues for female cancer survivors affected by the tumor treatment-related infertility. This condition occurs in approximately one third of women of fertile age and is mainly dependent on gonadotoxic protocols, including radiation treatments. Besides routine procedures such as the hormonal induction of follicular growth and subsequent cryopreservation of oocytes or embryos, the ovarian protection by gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) agonists during chemotherapy as well as even gonadal shielding during radiotherapy, other innovative techniques are available today and need to be optimized to support their introduction into the clinical practice. These novel methods are hormone stimulation-free and include the ovarian cortex cryopreservation before anti-cancer treatments and its subsequent autologous reimplantation and a regenerative medicine approach using oocytes derived in vitro from ovarian stem cells (OSCs). For both procedures, the major benefit is related to the prompt recruitment and processing of the ovarian cortex fragments before gonadotoxic treatments. However, while the functional competence of oocytes within the cryopreserved cortex is not assessable, the in vitro maturation of OSCs to oocytes, allows to select the most competent eggs to be cryopreserved for fertility restoration.
Keyphrases
- stem cells
- clinical practice
- functional connectivity
- polycystic ovary syndrome
- end stage renal disease
- childhood cancer
- ejection fraction
- early stage
- young adults
- chronic kidney disease
- radiation induced
- mesenchymal stem cells
- cell therapy
- umbilical cord
- type diabetes
- squamous cell carcinoma
- adipose tissue
- prognostic factors
- skeletal muscle
- middle aged
- peritoneal dialysis
- papillary thyroid
- patient reported
- patient reported outcomes
- drug induced
- platelet rich plasma