Purpose: Current guidelines recommend screening at-risk childhood cancer survivors for ovarian dysfunction using follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH). However, FSH identifies diminished ovarian reserve (DOR), a component of ovarian dysfunction, in the later stages when fertility preservation is less likely to succeed. This analysis evaluates the utility of anti-Mullerian hormone (AMH) for the assessment of DOR in adolescent and young adult (AYA)-aged survivors of childhood cancer.
Methods: A retrospective chart review of 13- to 21-year-old female survivors who received gonadotoxic therapy and were ≥2 years off therapy was performed. Gonadotoxic treatments were categorized as low, moderate, or high risk for future infertility. Patients with AMH below the assay's age-specific normal range were identified and stratified by FSH values (normal ≤12 mIU/mL). Prevalence of low AMH and AMH-FSH subgroups was calculated and risk factors were evaluated using logistic regression.
Results: AMH was measured in 190 survivors who received gonadotoxic treatment; of them, 35.3% had low AMH. Among survivors who received <30 Gy cranial radiation and were not on hormone therapy (n = 141), 18.4% had normal FSH with low AMH. Stratified by future infertility risk, 10.6% of low-risk, 38.1% of moderate-risk, and 25.7% of high-risk survivors had normal FSH with low AMH (p < 0.01). Within the low-risk group, normal FSH with low AMH was significantly associated with older age at diagnosis (p = 0.02).
Conclusion: Nearly 20% of AYA-aged at-risk survivors had low AMH and normal FSH. DOR in these patients would have been missed in standard recommended surveillance practices.
Keywords: anti-Mullerian hormone; gonadotoxicity; ovarian dysfunction; ovarian reserve; survivorship.