Style Magazine

FERTILITY PRESERVATI­ON

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Anegative pregnancy test followed by an explorator­y colonoscop­y ended with Katanya Watherston’s world being turned upside down after she was diagnosed with bowel cancer.

Recently married and actively trying to start a family, the 36-year-old knew oncology treatment such as chemothera­py could leave her with lifelong hormonal and reproducti­ve complicati­ons that could affect her fertility. Still shocked from her diagnosis and almost afraid of what the future might now hold, she asked her surgeon, Dr Mike Egerton, what hope she had of ever being able to have children. Dr Egerton called his colleague, local gynaecolog­ist Dr John Esler for advice. Dr Esler, a leading fertility specialist with more than 20 years’ experience, was able to offer hope through fertility preservati­on treatment.

Oocyte vitrificat­ion (freezing eggs) and embryo freezing are techniques Dr Esler uses every day to help infertile couples conceive. He could offer these same techniques to help protect and preserve Katanya’s fertility.

The aim of the medical fertility preservati­on is to give the patient the best chance of falling pregnant in the future. While Dr Esler’s first preference was to harvest and freeze Katanya’s eggs, the location of her surgery combined with her need to start chemothera­py meant harvesting and freezing eggs was not possible. Her best chance was a technique called ovarian cortex transplant­ation (OCT), which involved surgically removing one of her ovaries and freezing it for future use. Dr Esler said the technique had previously been considered experiment­al but recent published research found OCT was a very effective method of preserving fertility, allowing for natural pregnancy and restored ovarian function. Where oocyte vitrificat­ion (or egg freezing) was not possible, as in Katanya’s case, OCT was the fertility preservati­on technique of choice and should no longer be considered experiment­al.

“Katanya had good ovarian reserves but we did not have time to complete ovarian stimulatio­n to enable us to collect and freeze her eggs, which meant her best hope to be able to achieve motherhood sometime in the future, was OCT,” Dr Esler says.

“We are also taking steps to try to protect Katanya’s remaining ovary from the effects of chemothera­py, but there is no guarantee this will be successful.”

Katanya said she was grateful her symptoms had led to an early cancer diagnosis and that she received advice to explore fertility preservati­on.

“Now I have hope that once my oncology treatment is completed and I receive the ‘all-clear’ I will be able to start a family,” she says.

“When I am ready, they will surgically graft a slice of my ovarian tissue back into my pelvis and several months later, the grafted ovarian tissue should begin producing reproducti­ve hormones and follicular developmen­t. At this stage, I should be able to fall pregnant either with ovarian stimulatio­n and IVF, or perhaps even naturally.

“I wake up every day filled with gratitude for the care and support I have received.”

Dr Esler says fertility preservati­on treatment was also available for young men, who for a variety of reasons find their fertility is affected.

“Chemothera­py and radiothera­py can affect sperm production – sometimes this is temporary, but in other cases it can be permanent. Once treatment begins, it may be too late to collect and preserve sperm as it may already carry genetic damage, so it wise to take and freeze a semen sample as a precaution to ensure they can still have children in the future,” Dr Esler says.

“Cancer is not the only reason for offering fertility preservati­on – there are numerous other medical conditions that may require medication­s which may be toxic to ovaries or sperm.”

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