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Trial Title:
Ovarian Tissue Cryopreservation for Fertility Preservation
NCT ID:
NCT05875155
Condition:
Cancer
Autoimmune Diseases
Conditions: Official terms:
Autoimmune Diseases
Conditions: Keywords:
Fertility
Fertility Preservation
Infertility
Ovary
Ovarian
Oncofertility
Study type:
Observational
Overall status:
Recruiting
Study design:
Time perspective:
Prospective
Intervention:
Intervention type:
Diagnostic Test
Intervention name:
Infectious Disease Labwork
Description:
Infectious disease labs will be drawn and resulted.
Arm group label:
Cryopreservation
Intervention type:
Diagnostic Test
Intervention name:
Fertility-Based Labwork
Description:
Other labwork to understand fertility may be drawn.
Arm group label:
Cryopreservation
Summary:
The goal of this observational study is to learn about fertility preservation for
pre-pubertal, peri-pubertal, and adult participants that are unable to pursue clinical
standard of care fertility preservation such as egg (oocyte) and embryo cryopreservation.
In addition, this study will provide research tissue for the following Specific Aims:
1. To optimize techniques for cryopreservation of ovarian tissues from patients at
significant risk for infertility.
2. To investigate factors affecting successful maturation ovarian tissue.
Participants will undergo a surgical procedure to remove an ovary (oophorectomy) to
preserve their gonadal tissue for fertility preservation.
Detailed description:
The cure rate of cancer in children, adolescents and young adults continues to increase
with advances in chemotherapy and/or radiation protocols. As more pediatric oncology
patients become long-term survivors, the consequences of their treatment on their quality
of life have become an important thrust of clinical oncology and basic science research.
One of the most common and most devastating long-term sequelae following cancer treatment
is infertility. Many chemotherapy and radiation-containing regimens for cancer therapy or
prior to bone marrow transplantation can cause sterility in children and young adults.
Fertility-preserving options are available for adult women (embryo freezing), but not all
adult women are able to take advantage of this option since it requires fertilization.
Some adult women are not able to cryopreserve embryos because they lack a partner or
cannot delay treatment for the time required for ovarian stimulation. Currently, no
fertility-preserving options are available for prepubescent girls who are not yet
producing mature gametes and post-pubescent females whose follicular pool cannot be
shielded from cancer therapy. However, experimental techniques are currently being
developed to provide future alternatives for patients that preserve their ovarian
tissue/cells prior to gonadotoxic treatment. In order to take advantage of these and
future technologies, patients must harvest and preserve their ovarian tissue and/or
oocytes (eggs) prior to the initiation of gonadotoxic therapy. This study will be
available to girls and women from prepubertal years through 40 years of age who will
undergo potentially sterilizing treatments. The primary objective of the proposed study
is to develop techniques for long-term preservation of ovarian function through
cryopreservation of ovarian tissue and/or cells prior to therapies that are likely to
cause infertility (e.g., chemotherapy, radiation). This study will maintain cryopreserved
ovarian tissue and/or cells for participating patients as a resource for future elective
procedures to attempt fertility restoration. This study will also provide long-term
follow-up on the fertility status of patients that will undergo a potentially sterilizing
treatment for their primary disease or condition.
Fertility status has an important impact on the post-treatment quality of life for cancer
survivors and other patients that receive gonadotoxic therapies (e.g., prior to bone
marrow transplantation). Established fertility preserving therapies are available for
adult women, but these therapies are not accessible or appropriate for all adult female
patients. Currently there are no therapies to preserve the future fertility of
preadolescent girls. However, new reproductive therapies are under development and may
one day offer "fertile hope" to those survivors that do not currently have access to
fertility preserving therapies. Clinical management of fertility-threatening diseases and
treatments must have foresight of the gonadotoxic side effects and the potential for
infertility. When no established fertility sparing options are available, it is
reasonable to offer harvesting and cryopreservation of ovarian tissue as a possible means
of fertility preservation. This study will provide a pool of research tissue that will be
used to develop and test methods for manipulation and cryopreservation of ovarian tissue.
Progress in these investigations may open up a range of new fertility preservation
techniques to female patients that currently have no options. At the same time, a
substantial portion of the patient's ovarian tissue will be cryopreserved and reserved
for her own future use.
Criteria for eligibility:
Study pop:
Eligible patients who will undergo an infertility-causing treatment and for whom standard
of care fertility preservation procedures are not available will be identified by their
physician.
Sampling method:
Non-Probability Sample
Criteria:
Inclusion Criteria:
- Be female age less than 40 years old.
- Unable or unwilling to make use of oocyte or embryo banking alone.
- Be scheduled to undergo surgery, chemotherapy, drug treatment and/or radiation for
the treatment or prevention of a medical condition or malignancy with risk of
causing permanent and complete loss of subsequent ovarian function.
- Or, have a medical condition or malignancy that requires removal of all or part of
one or both ovaries.
- Or, Have newly diagnosed or recurrent disease. Those who were not enrolled at the
time of initial diagnosis (i.e., patients with recurrent disease) are eligible if
they have not previously received therapy that is viewed as likely to result in
complete and permanent loss of ovarian function.
- Have two ovaries if undergoing elective removal of an ovary for fertility
preservation only.
Exclusion Criteria:
- Diagnosed with psychological, psychiatric, or other conditions which prevent giving
fully informed consent.
- Diagnosed with an underlying medical condition that significantly increases their
risk of complications from anesthesia and surgery.
Gender:
Female
Minimum age:
N/A
Maximum age:
39 Years
Healthy volunteers:
No
Locations:
Facility:
Name:
Magee-Womens Hospital
Address:
City:
Pittsburgh
Zip:
15213
Country:
United States
Status:
Recruiting
Contact:
Last name:
Rachel Neelley, BA
Phone:
412-641-7475
Phone ext:
1
Email:
fertilitypreservation@upmc.edu
Start date:
January 13, 2011
Completion date:
January 2031
Lead sponsor:
Agency:
University of Pittsburgh
Agency class:
Other
Source:
University of Pittsburgh
Record processing date:
ClinicalTrials.gov processed this data on November 12, 2024
Source: ClinicalTrials.gov page:
https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT05875155