Edmonton Journal

Study gives hope to infertile cancer patients

Surgical remedy seen for damage done by chemothera­py

- Sheryl Ubelacker

TORONTO – Scientists have long been searching for a way to preserve fertility in young boys left unable to father a child later in life after being treated for childhood cancer. That’s because chemothera­py and radiation can destroy the stem cells in the testes that give rise to sperm with the onset of puberty.

Now researcher­s, using macaque monkeys, have shown that small samples of testicular tissue that have been frozen can be thawed and re-implanted following chemothera­py and begin producing sperm.

The success in monkeys raises hope that the technique might one day be safely used in human males left infertile by life-saving treatment for cancer, say researcher­s, whose work is described in the November issue of the journal Cell Stem Cell, published Thursday.

Not only were most of the animals able to produce sperm cells, but sperm from one macaque was able to fertilize the eggs from female macaques, said principal researcher Kyle Orwig, director of the fertility preservati­on program at the University of Pittsburgh.

“We could cryo-preserve stem cells and thaw them and transplant them into the testes of animals that had been rendered infertile by chemothera­py treatment,” Orwig said from Pittsburgh. “And those transplant­ed stem cells produced sperm, which were competent to fertilize macaque eggs.”

The monkey eggs were fertilized in the lab and allowed to grow through cell division only to the point where they would have been able to implant in the female animal’s uterine wall. There were no live macaque offspring produced.

But Orwig hopes the procedure could eventually allow childhood cancer survivors who have been left infertile by treatment to father their own children.

Not all cancer therapy leads to permanent infertilit­y — that depends on the type and dose of chemo drugs used as well as the areas targeted by radiation.

Still, uncertaint­y about one’s ability to have a family in the future is no trivial matter for childhood cancer patients, most of whom must contend with a range of adverse health effects arising from treatment, often for the rest of their lives.

“Cancer patients report that their fertility status has a major impact on their quality of life, both in terms of their psychologi­cal well-being, but also their ability to develop relationsh­ips,” Orwig said.

In fact, there are several clinics around the world that have preserved testicular tissue from pre-pubescent boys subsequent­ly treated for cancer, “in anticipati­on that (their) stem cells can be used in the future to achieve a pregnancy,” he said.

“We’re all gambling that things that are in the research pipeline will be translatab­le to the clinic ... I think we’ve demonstrat­ed that it’s feasible and I think this is an important step toward translatin­g it to the clinic.”

However, more research is needed before the experiment­al technique can be tried in humans, Orwig stressed.

For one thing, there is disagreeme­nt in the field as to when the stem cell-bearing tissue should be transplant­ed back into a testis.

“Some people think that you should put the cells in as soon as possible before the testis deteriorat­es to the point where it can’t support sperm production,” he said, referring to completion of treatment and a cancer-free status.

“Some people think you should wait all the way until these boys grow up and are ready to have children, which could be 20 years in the future.”

Orwig believes that patients whose testicular tissue has been biopsied for cryopreser­vation will ultimately make that decision themselves.

But before researcher­s even attempt the procedure in humans, there is a risk they must deal with: the potential they could re-seed cancer cells into a testicle along with the stem cell transplant.

Leukemia, for instance, is a cancer of the blood, and that blood circulates through the tissues of the body, including the testes.

Testicular tissue removed before treatment could potentiall­y contain cancer cells, Orwig explained.

“And so if you take that tissue out before treatment and then you plan to transplant it back in later, there’s a chance you could re-introduce a cancer,” he said.

“That is certainly a risk. This is why there is more work to do in pre-clinical studies before it’s time to translate to the clinic, because that would be the worst outcome, to re-introduce a cancer into a survivor. That would be terrible.”

Orwig noted the procedure would not be an option for post-pubescent teens or men who have been treated for cancer but did not store a semen sample prior to chemothera­py or radiation.

“We know that chemothera­py and radiation for their cancer or other conditions can cause permanent infertilit­y. And for that reason, a man who desires to have a family after their treatment, they should freeze a sperm sample.

“And there are a variety of ways those sperm can be used in the future to achieve a pregnancy,” including in vitro fertilizat­ion.

 ?? STEPHANIE PILICK/AFP/ Gett y Images ?? A new fertility experiment performed on monkeys raises hope that the technique can help infertile cancer patients conceive.
STEPHANIE PILICK/AFP/ Gett y Images A new fertility experiment performed on monkeys raises hope that the technique can help infertile cancer patients conceive.

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