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The purpose of this study is to obtain ovarian tissue from female patients undergoing gonadotoxic treatments or gonadal ablating surgery, and that in consequence may see their future fertility impaired. Participants will be offered to preserve (freeze) and use ovarian tissue for the purpose of conceiving in the future.
Although, 86 live births have been reported with ovarian tissue cryo-preservation and grafting, the procedure is still considered experimental.
This research, will help us to learn and validate how to perform ovarian tissue cryo-preservation and thawing in the fertility preservation context.
Full description
his Study will conducted at the Centre Hospitalier Universitaire Ste-Justine Collected ovarian tissue will only be for the patients own use.
Subjects will undergo surgical removal of their ovarian tissue, and the following categories will be invited to participate:
If the subject chooses to participate and consent, she will be assessed to determine her eligibility The subject will also have a serum AMH drawn for the evaluation of the ovarian reserve, and also infectious disease testing will also be performed per Health Canada guidelines.
The oophorectomie will be performed laparoscopically under general anesthesia. In patients' in whom it is medically unsafe or not feasible to complete the surgery laparoscopically, the patient and/or legal gardian may opt to proceed with a mini-laparotomy or laparotomy approach or may opt to stop the procedure and withdraw from the study at that time. This decision will be discussed with the patient and legal gardian during the consenting process and documented prior to the surgery. The procedural risk and treatment delays will be discussed with the primary treatment team in order to provide a better evaluation of the patients wellbeing. This procedure is performed for fertility preservation purposes only, but can potentially be coordinated with another procedure such as placement of a central line for future chemotherapy. In the event the subject is undergoing a surgical intervention for other indications, the oophorectomies could be coordinated at the same time.
A tissu sample will be evaluated by pathology for routine histologic evaluation. If the pathologist finds evidence of neoplasia in the ovarian tissue sample. All the tissue could be send to pathology for a more detailed examination. In this case, there will be no tissue available for the subject to use for fertility preservation.
Cryopreservation :
Ovarian tissue preparation:
Vitrification:
The ovarian tissue bio-bank is located at the embryology laboratory in the REI department at the CHU Ste-Justine
Infectious disease screening:
As per Health Canada guidelines, patients will be screened for (VIH, VDRL, HBsAg, anti Hepatitis C, HTLV).
Study and safety data collection:
Adverse events after an elective oophorectomy will be identified according to the Health Canada criteria (www.hc-sc.gc.ca/ahc-asc/media/advisories-avis/reaction-eng.php#Drugs).
Data Collection :
Date of fertility preservation
Diagnosis
Outcome: remission, relapse, or death
Gynaecological history
Obstetrical and neonatal outcomes
Treatment regimen associated with high risk of sterility
Choices regarding use of cryopreserved stored tissue for fertility restoration Fertility preservation outcome
Risks:
The potential risks of laparoscopy, laparotomy, and oophorectomy include injury to bowel, bladder, and blood vessels with need for subsequent repair. The chance of the subject requiring hospitalization for complication(s) is about 1%. In addition to the surgical risk, there are also inherent risks of general anesthesia. The subject's chance of dying from anesthesia is less than 1 in 10,000. The risk of injury with laparotomy is moderate. The subject, legal guardian, and/or parent(s) will be asked to sign the standard consent form for laparoscopy, and/or laparotomy and oophorectomy after the risks and benefits have been discussed. The subject, legal guardian(s), and/or parent(s) will also be asked by the anesthesiology team to sign an anesthesia consent form after risks and benefits have been discussed.
There is a risk that the ovary to be cryopreserved may be affected by cancer, disqualifying the subject from ovarian tissue freezing. Although care will be taken, damage to the removed ovarian tissue may occur during any part of the cryopreservation, shipping or storage process. The effects of cryopreservation and long term storage on human ovarian tissues are not known and possible damage to the tissues may occur; in this instance a future pregnancy may not occur. The birth defect(s) and/or genetic damage to any child who may be born following ovarian tissue cryopreservation procedure are also unknown. However, thousands of children have been born worldwide from frozen embryos and eggs and there has been no report of increased risk of birth defects in these children.
Benefits:
The patient participation in the study protocol may provide her with a means to restore her fertility and reproductive hormonal function. However, However, there is a significant possibility that there may be no direct benefit due to no utilization of the ovarian tissue, or that the ovarian tissue may not result in any live brith.
Costs: All expenses related to this procedure will be covered by the "Régie s'Assurance du Québec". Tissue storage is also covered for a period of five years.
Enrollment
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Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
Exclusion criteria
Women with psychological, psychiatric or other conditions which prevent giving fully informed consent.
Women whose underlying medical condition significantly increases their risk of complications from anesthesia and surgery.
Women to whom the research intervention may decrease the survival or the treatment response to the underlying disease.
AMH (Anti Müllerian Hormone) <0.016 ng/dl
Women whose surgery is preformed outside the CHU Ste-Justine
Patients eligible to a standard fertility preservation procedure.
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
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Central trial contact
Julio Saumet Chilito, MD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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