Anticancer chemotherapeutic agents and testicular dysfunction

Reprod Med Biol. 2011 Mar 17;10(2):81-87. doi: 10.1007/s12522-011-0080-y. eCollection 2011 Jun.

Abstract

The improvement of the survival rates of various cancer patients has resulted in increased focus on the long-term complications of treatment. Most anticancer chemotherapeutic agents are gonadotoxic, and sterility is therefore one of the most common complications for cancer survivors. The degree of gonadal dysfunction induced by anticancer chemotherapeutic agents seems to be drug specific and dose related. Following the development of new chemotherapeutic agents that have high benefit-to-risk ratios, sufficient sperm can be acquired by collection of ejaculated semen after the treatment in relatively many cases, and assisted reproductive techniques enable conceptions with even severe spermatogenesis dysfunction. However, anticancer chemotherapeutic agents have consistently exhibited the potential to induce permanent azoospermia. Cryopreservation of semen, which is currently the only proven successful option for future fertility preservation in male cancer patients, should certainly be recommended before cancer therapy. However, to date, no established effective methods have shown the capability to protect gonadal function from anticancer treatment in prepubertal cancer patients.

Keywords: Chemotherapy; Gonadal dysfunction; Hematological malignancy; Spermatogenesis; Testicular cancer.

Publication types

  • Review