Anti-Müllerian hormone screening to assess ovarian reserve among female survivors of childhood cancer
Autor: | Genevieve Gingras-Hill, Anne-Marie Charpentier, Abha A. Gupta, Candemir Cigsar, David C. Hodgson, Sameera Ahmed, Ellen M. Greenblatt, Amy Lee Chong |
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Rok vydání: | 2013 |
Předmět: |
Oncology
Adult Anti-Mullerian Hormone endocrine system medicine.medical_specialty Adolescent Cross-sectional study media_common.quotation_subject Fertility Young Adult Internal medicine Neoplasms medicine Humans Survivors Young adult Ovarian reserve Ovarian Reserve Menstrual cycle media_common Gynecology biology urogenital system Oncology (nursing) business.industry Cancer Anti-Müllerian hormone medicine.disease Cross-Sectional Studies biology.protein Female business Hormone |
Zdroj: | Journal of cancer survivorship : research and practice. 8(4) |
ISSN: | 1932-2267 |
Popis: | Anti-Müllerian hormone (AMH) is an indicator of oocyte reserve in healthy females. The role of AMH testing in oncology remains investigational, although its sensitivity and stability over the menstrual cycle make it an attractive screening test for fertility assessment among female cancer survivors. We measured AMH level in survivors of childhood cancer and evaluated its association with treatment and patient factors.Participants were adult female survivors of childhood malignancy treated with chemotherapy. Serum AMH was measured at a random day of the menstrual cycle. Multivariate analysis was used to evaluate the association between AMH level, alkylating agent exposure using the cyclophosphamide equivalent dose (CED), and other covariates.Sixty-six females with a median attained age of 23.3 years were eligible for analysis. Median AMH was 25.5 pM (range 0.5-108.0), at a median time of 11.5 years (range 1.4-25.1) since cancer diagnosis. Twenty-three patients (34.8%) had low AMH, including a significant proportion that reported normal menstrual cycles. Compared to ALL survivors, sarcoma survivors had significantly lower AMH levels. Among alkylating agents evaluated, procarbazine had the greatest adverse effect on AMH. In multivariate analysis, higher CED (p = 0.001), older age at diagnosis (p 0.001), and use of oral contraceptive pills (p = 0.04) remained significantly associated with lower AMH.Random AMH can reveal evidence of oocyte depletion among female survivors reporting normal cycles, although low AMH should be interpreted cautiously among those taking oral contraception. Age at exposure and CED can aid identification of those more likely to have low AMH, although CED may underestimate the effect of procarbazine on oocyte reserve.Measurement of AMH can reveal apparent depletion of ovarian reserve in female childhood cancer survivors reporting normal menstrual cycles. Sarcoma survivors and those exposed to procarbazine may benefit from targeted AMH evaluation in an outpatient setting, and thereby allow appropriate fertility counseling before the onset of premature ovarian failure. The cyclophosphamide equivalent dose may facilitate comparison of the potential effect of different regimens on fertility. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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