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Erschienen in: Journal of Cancer Survivorship 4/2017

06.03.2017

Validity of self-reported fertility-threatening cancer treatments in female young adult cancer survivors

verfasst von: Samantha C. Roberts, Amber Knight, Brian W. Whitcomb, Jessica R. Gorman, Andrew C. Dietz, H. Irene Su

Erschienen in: Journal of Cancer Survivorship | Ausgabe 4/2017

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Abstract

Purpose

Detailed cancer treatment information is important to fertility and pregnancy care of female young adult cancer survivors. Accuracy of self-report of treatments that impact fertility and pregnancy is unknown. This study assessed agreement between self-report and medical records on receipt of fertility-threatening treatments.

Methods

A national cohort study of female young adult cancer survivors reported cancer treatments via Web-based questionnaires. Primary cancer treatment records were abstracted. Self-reported exposure to fertility-threatening therapies (alkylating chemotherapy, stem cell transplant, pelvic radiation, hysterectomy, and/or oophorectomy) was compared to medical records. Logistic regression models estimated odds ratios (OR) for characteristics associated with inaccurate self-report of fertility-threatening therapies.

Results

The study included 101 survivors (mean age 28.2, SD 6.3). Lymphoma (33%), breast cancer (26%), and gynecologic cancers (10%) were the most common cancers. Accuracy of self-report was 68% for alkylating chemotherapy and 92–97% for radiation, surgery, and transplant. Significant proportions of survivors who were treated with transplant (8/13, 62%), alkylating chemotherapy (18/43, 42%), pelvic radiation (4/13, 31%), or hysterectomy and/or oophorectomy (3/13, 23%) did not report undergoing these therapies. In adjusted analysis, age ≤ 25 at diagnosis (OR 3.4, 95% CI 1.3–8.7) and recurrence (OR 6.0, 95% CI 1.5–24.4) were related to inaccurate self-report.

Conclusions

Female young adult cancer survivors have limited recall of fertility-threatening cancer treatment exposures. Reproductive health providers and researchers who need this information may require primary medical records or treatment summaries.

Implications for Cancer Survivors

Additional patient education regarding treatment-related reproductive risks is needed to facilitate patient engagement in survivorship. Obtaining a cancer treatment summary will help survivors communicate their prior treatment exposures to reproductive healthcare providers.
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Metadaten
Titel
Validity of self-reported fertility-threatening cancer treatments in female young adult cancer survivors
verfasst von
Samantha C. Roberts
Amber Knight
Brian W. Whitcomb
Jessica R. Gorman
Andrew C. Dietz
H. Irene Su
Publikationsdatum
06.03.2017
Verlag
Springer US
Erschienen in
Journal of Cancer Survivorship / Ausgabe 4/2017
Print ISSN: 1932-2259
Elektronische ISSN: 1932-2267
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11764-017-0610-7

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