Home > Riviste > Minerva Obstetrics and Gynecology > Fascicoli precedenti > Minerva Ginecologica 2016 August;68(4) > Minerva Ginecologica 2016 August;68(4):458-65

ULTIMO FASCICOLO
 

JOURNAL TOOLS

Opzioni di pubblicazione
eTOC
Per abbonarsi
Sottometti un articolo
Segnala alla tua biblioteca
 

ARTICLE TOOLS

Estratti
Permessi
Per citare questo articolo
Share

 

REVIEWS   

Minerva Ginecologica 2016 August;68(4):458-65

Copyright © 2016 EDIZIONI MINERVA MEDICA

lingua: Inglese

Female fertility preservation: a clinical perspective

Mary E. PAVONE, Rafael CONFINO, Marissa STEINBERG

Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine, Chicago, IL, USA


PDF


For patients with cancer, preserving the ability to start a family at a time of their choosing is especially important and may influence decisions pertaining to cancer treatment. For other women who have delayed childbearing for personal or professional reasons, fertility preservation offers the possibility of having a biological child regardless of age. Though these women may be interested in or benefit from fertility preservation, fertility preservation services remain underutilized. While embryo and oocyte cryopreservation remain the standard strategies for female fertility preservation recommended by the American Society of Reproductive Medicine, the American Society of Clinical Oncology and the European Society of Medical Oncology, other strategies (e.g. pharmacological protection of the ovaries and ovarian tissue cryopreservation) are the subject of increasing research. This review will present new data that have become available over the past few years pertaining to all available methods of fertility preservation.

inizio pagina