Publication | Closed Access
Post‐treatment Fertility in Patients with Testicular Cancer.: II. Influence of Cis‐platin‐based Combination Chemotherapy and of Retroperitoneal Surgery on Hormone and Sperm Cell Production
90
Citations
9
References
1985
Year
SpermatogenesisFertilityPost‐treatment FertilityReproductive HealthGynecologySemen AnalysisFertilisationTesticular TumoursOncologyGenitourinary CancerActive Sperm ProductionTesticular CancerSperm Cell ProductionPublic HealthRadiation OncologyCancer ResearchSperm AnalysisInfertilityAndrologyFertility PreservationHuman ReproductionUrologyMedicine
Active sperm production was observed in 20 of 35 patients with testicular cancer 1 year after discontinuation of all treatment (retroperitoneal surgery only: 13; cis-platin-based chemotherapy (CVB) +/- other treatment: 22). The percentage of patients who regained spermatogenesis increased slightly after a further 1 to 2 years. Fourteen patients (of 121 under observation) impregnated their wives (after retroperitoneal surgery: 9; after CVB +/- other therapy: 5). The individual serum FSH values correlated significantly with the results of sperm analysis: an FSH value greater than or equal to 20 iu/l indicated azoospermia in 8 of 12 patients, whereas only 5 of 30 patients with FSH levels less than or equal to 12 iu/l were azoospermic. Serum testosterone and pituitary serum LH were virtually unaffected by the treatment. In conclusion, 1 to 3 years after cis-platin-based multi-modality treatment for testicular cancer, 50 to 60% of patients have active spermatogenesis and fatherhood can be achieved by a significant number of them.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1