成年男性癌症患者的生育能力保护:系统回顾和荟萃分析。

IF 8.3 Q1 OBSTETRICS & GYNECOLOGY Human reproduction open Pub Date : 2024-01-30 eCollection Date: 2024-01-01 DOI:10.1093/hropen/hoae006
Qing Li, Qiong-Yu Lan, Wen-Bing Zhu, Li-Qing Fan, Chuan Huang
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引用次数: 0

摘要

研究问题:精子冷冻保存对于成年男性癌症患者来说,是否是一种可行且有效的生育力保存方法?精子冷冻保存是一种有效的生育能力保存方法,可使癌症患者受益:精子冷冻保存是有效保存男性生育能力的唯一方法。这是人工生殖技术中的一项重要程序。最近,由于癌症治疗的显著进步,越来越多的研究报告了癌症患者精子冷冻保存的结果:我们在以下数据库中对截至 2021 年 12 月 31 日发表的相关研究进行了广泛的文献检索:CENTRAL、CNKI、Cochrane Systematic Reviews、EMBASE、MEDLINE、PUBMED 和 Web of Science。使用的检索词为"(冷冻或冷藏或冷冻或银行或冷冻存储或存储)和(精子或精液或精子)和(癌症或肿瘤或恶性肿瘤或肿瘤)":我们纳入了所有报道在男性患者接受癌症治疗前或治疗期间提供或尝试冷冻保存精子的研究,这些患者被认为存在与治疗相关的生育能力受损风险。我们对每项研究的所有数据进行了资格评估。主要排除标准如下:非癌症患者;儿童和青少年癌症患者;未报告使用冷冻保存精子的情况;使用新鲜精液进行 ART;未报告在治疗前或治疗期间提供或尝试提供冷冻保存精子的癌症患者人数;使用实验性生育力保存技术,如保存睾丸组织或精原干细胞;重复数据;摘要、病例报告、评论、综述或社论;报告的数据不充分。纳入研究的质量采用纽卡斯尔-渥太华量表和非随机研究方法指数进行评估:这项荟萃分析纳入了 69 项非随机研究,共有 32 234 名患者转诊进行精子分析,23 178 名患者冷冻保存了至少一份精子样本。总的冷冻保存失败率为 10%(95% CI,8-12%),精子处理率和精子使用率分别为 23%(95% CI,16-30%)和 9%(95% CI,8-10%)。怀孕率、流产率和分娩率分别为 28%(95% CI,22-33%)、13%(95% CI,10-17%)和 20%(95% CI,15-25%)。分组分析显示,与十年前发布的研究相比,近期研究的怀孕率和分娩率更高,冷冻保存失败率更低。亚洲的研究报告显示,精子处理率和怀孕率高于其他大洲。我们的分析显示,ICSI、IVF 和 IUI 每个周期的临床妊娠率分别为 34% (27-41%)、24% (14-35%) 和 9% (5-15%),每个周期的分娩率分别为 23% (17-30%)、18% (11-26%) 和 5% (1-9%):与所有荟萃分析一样,我们也应考虑到一些局限性。我们研究的第一个局限性是数据的时间跨度为 36 年。在此期间,世界卫生组织修订了精子分析标准,并发生了其他重要变化。还有一个局限性是,研究结果没有分析癌症类型与精子质量之间的相关性。早期的许多研究受到样本量小和缺乏对照组的限制。此外,几乎所有的研究都没有考虑疾病的严重程度,而这可能会对研究结果产生重大影响。因此,进一步的研究应评估癌症类型,特别是病情严重程度对精子质量的影响,以便得出更准确的结论。同样,大多数研究未能区分不同类型的肿瘤患者,而是得出推测适用于所有癌症患者的概括性结论,这也是不恰当的。在本分析中,我们没有患者病情的深入信息,虽然我们做了大量努力对不同类型肿瘤患者的治疗结果进行了全面的系统回顾和荟萃分析,但必须承认结果可能存在偏差。不过,在没有患者层面数据的情况下,使用每项研究的平均结果也可能会造成偏差:研究结果的广泛意义:精子冷冻保存是一种有效的生育力保存方法,可使癌症患者受益。观察到的冷冻精子使用率为9%,这可能低估了实际使用率,因为随访时间较短,不足以获得年轻癌症幸存者使用冷冻精子的全面数据。
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Fertility preservation in adult male patients with cancer: a systematic review and meta-analysis.

Study question: Does sperm cryopreservation serve as a feasible and effective method for preserving fertility in adult male patients with cancer?

Summary answer: Sperm cryopreservation is an effective fertility preservation method and may benefit patients with cancer.

What is known already: Sperm cryopreservation is the only way to efficiently preserve male fertility. It is an important procedure in ART. Recently, due to remarkable advances in cancer treatment, an increasing number of studies have reported the outcomes of sperm cryopreservation in patients with cancer.

Study design size duration: We conducted an extensive literature search for relevant studies published through to 31 December 2021, in the following databases: CENTRAL, CNKI, Cochrane Systematic Reviews, EMBASE, MEDLINE, PUBMED, and Web of Science. The search terms used were '(cryopreservation OR freeze OR freezing OR banking OR cryostorage OR storage) AND (sperm OR semen OR spermatozoon) AND (cancer OR tumor OR malignancy OR neoplasm)'.

Participants/materials setting methods: We included all studies that reported offering or attempting to cryopreserve sperm before or during cancer treatment in male patients considered at risk of treatment-related fertility impairment. We evaluated the eligibility of all data in each study. The major exclusion criteria were as follows: non-cancer patients; pediatric and adolescent cancer patients; not reporting the use of cryopreserved sperm; use of fresh semen for ART; not reporting the number of patients with cancer offered sperm cryopreservation or attempting to do so before or during treatment; using an experimental fertility preservation technique such as preservation of testicular tissue or spermatogonial stem cells; duplicate data; abstracts, case report, comments, reviews, or editorials; insufficient data reported. The quality of the included studies was assessed using the Newcastle-Ottawa scale and the Methodological Index for Non-Randomized Studies.

Main results and the role of chance: This meta-analysis included 69 non-randomized studies, with 32 234 patients referred for sperm analysis and 23 178 patients cryopreserving at least one sperm sample. The pooled failed-to-cryopreserve rate was 10% (95% CI, 8-12%), and the sperm disposal and sperm use rates were 23% (95% CI, 16-30%) and 9% (95% CI, 8-10%), respectively. The pregnancy, miscarriage, and delivery rates were 28% (95% CI, 22-33%), 13% (95% CI, 10-17%), and 20% (95% CI, 15-25%), respectively. Subgroup analysis showed higher pregnancy and delivery rates, as well as a lower failed-to-cryopreserve rate, in recent studies compared to those released a decade ago. The studies from Asia reported higher sperm disposal and pregnancy rates than in other continents. Our analysis showed clinical pregnancy rates per cycle of 34% (27-41%), 24% (14-35%), and 9% (5-15%) and delivery rates per cycle of 23% (17-30%), 18% (11-26%), and 5% (1-9%) for ICSI, IVF, and IUI, respectively.

Limitations reasons for caution: As with all meta-analyses, some limitations should be considered. The first limitation of our study is that the data span 36 years. During this time, the World Health Organization has revised its sperm analysis standards, and other important changes have been made. There is also a limitation in that the outcome does not analyze the correlation between the type of cancer and sperm quality. Many of the earlier studies were limited by small sample sizes and a lack of control groups. Furthermore, almost all studies did not consider the severity of the disease, which could potentially have a substantial impact on the results. Consequently, further research should evaluate the effect of the type of cancer and, in particular, the severity of the condition on sperm quality in order to draw more precise conclusions. Similarly, it is inappropriate that most studies failed to differentiate between patients with different types of tumors and instead drew generalized conclusions that are presumed to apply to all patients with cancer. In the present analysis, we did not have in-depth information on patients' disease, and although extensive efforts were made to conduct a thorough systematic review and meta-analysis of the outcomes for patients with various types of tumors, the results must be acknowledged as being subject to bias. However, the use of average results obtained in each study, without the patient-level data, might also represent a source of bias.

Wider implications of the findings: Sperm cryopreservation is an effective fertility preservation method and may benefit patients with cancer. The observed utilization rate of frozen sperm at 9% may underestimate the actual usage, as the short follow-up period is inadequate for obtaining comprehensive data on the use of frozen sperm in young cancer survivors. ART plays an important role in fertility preservation and the achievement of pregnancy, with this meta-analysis showing that ICSI delivers better clinical outcomes than IVF or IUI in patients with cancer undergoing fertility preservation.

Study funding/competing interests: This work was supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (grant no. 82001634, 81960550), and the China Postdoctoral Science Foundation (2019M661521). There are no competing interests to declare.

Registration number: CRID 42022314460.

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