A RetroSearch Logo

Home - News ( United States | United Kingdom | Italy | Germany ) - Football scores

Search Query:

Showing content from https://www.cancer.gov/about-cancer/treatment/side-effects/fertility-women below:

Female Fertility Issues and Cancer — Side Effects

Cancer treatments can lower your fertility by making it difficult to become pregnant or to carry a pregnancy. Most likely, your doctor will talk with you about whether or not cancer treatment may increase the risk of fertility problems or cause infertility. Sometimes you, or parents of a child being treated for cancer, may need to initiate this conversation with the doctor.

Whether fertility is affected depends on factors such as:

Learn about fertility issues for males in Fertility Issues in Boys and Men with Cancer.

Ask your doctor how the recommended cancer treatment may affect your fertility before starting treatment. Consider asking questions such as:

Learn about side effects related to Sexual Health Issues in Women with Cancer.

Cancer treatments may affect a female's fertility

Cancer treatments are important for your future health, but they may harm reproductive organs and glands that control fertility. Changes to your fertility may be temporary or permanent.

Talk with your health care team to learn what to expect, based on your treatment(s):

Making decisions about whether to preserve your fertility isn’t easy. You’ll need to learn about the risks of the proposed cancer treatment to your fertility as well as the best fertility preservation options for you. Infertility can be a difficult and upsetting side effect of some cancer treatments.

Although it might feel overwhelming to think about your fertility right now, most people benefit from having talked with their doctor (or their child’s doctor, when a child is being treated for cancer) about how treatment may affect their fertility and options to preserve fertility.

Although many people want to have children at some point in their life, families can come together in different ways. For support reach out to your health care team with questions or concerns, as well as to professionally led cancer support groups.

If you are a young person with cancer or the parent of a young girl or teen with cancer, this video of fertility options for young female cancer patients from the Children's Hospital of Philadelphia may help you talk with the healthcare team.

Fertility preservation options for girls and women

Fertility preservation is the process of saving or protecting your eggs, or reproductive tissue, in order to have biological children in the future. Women and girls with cancer have options to preserve their fertility. These procedures may be available at the hospital where you are receiving cancer treatment or at a fertility preservation clinic.

Talk with your doctor about the best option(s) for you based on your age, the type of cancer you have, and the specific treatment(s) you will be receiving.

The success rate, financial cost, and availability of these procedures vary. A growing number of states require insurance companies to cover fertility preservation methods. Learn if the state you live or work in requires insurance companies to cover fertility-related costs for people with cancer.

If you choose to take steps to preserve your fertility, your doctor and a fertility specialist will work together to develop a treatment plan that includes fertility preservation, whenever possible. Your health care team will advise you on the timing of fertility procedures you may choose to have and whether a delay may affect your treatment plan and prognosis.

Getting personalized care

It’s important to make decisions that reflect what is important to you. If having biological children is important, talk with your health care team about how the proposed cancer treatment may affect your ability to become pregnant. These conversations can help you get the information you need to make decisions. Most people with cancer are glad they had these discussions with their doctor.

Finding more resources, financial support, and clinical trials

These organizations also have information about fertility preservation options for people with cancer:

Learn about clinical trials by searching NCI-funded clinical trials and these NIH-funded clinical trials. You can also get answers to commonly asked questions about clinical trials, learn how clinical trials work, and why people participate in a clinical trial: Clinical Trials Information for Patients and Caregivers.

Listen to tips on how to manage changes in sexuality and fertility caused by cancer treatments such as radiation therapy.
(Type: MP3 | Time: 3:55 | Size: 3.7MB)


RetroSearch is an open source project built by @garambo | Open a GitHub Issue

Search and Browse the WWW like it's 1997 | Search results from DuckDuckGo

HTML: 3.2 | Encoding: UTF-8 | Version: 0.7.3