Japan Society of Clinical Oncology Clinical Practice Guidelines 2017 for fertility preservation in childhood, adolescent, and young adult cancer patients: part 1
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Published:2022-01-01
Issue:2
Volume:27
Page:265-280
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ISSN:1341-9625
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Container-title:International Journal of Clinical Oncology
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Int J Clin Oncol
Author:
Harada Miyuki, Kimura Fuminori, Takai Yasushi, Nakajima Takeshi, Ushijima Kimio, Kobayashi Hiroaki, Satoh Toyomi, Tozawa Akiko, Sugimoto Kohei, Saji Shigehira, Shimizu Chikako, Akiyama Kyoko, Bando Hiroko, Kuwahara Akira, Furui Tatsuro, Okada Hiroshi, Kawai Koji, Shinohara Nobuo, Nagao Koichi, Kitajima Michio, Suenobu Souichi, Soejima Toshinori, Miyachi Mitsuru, Miyoshi Yoko, Yoneda Akihiro, Horie Akihito, Ishida Yasushi, Usui Noriko, Kanda Yoshinobu, Fujii Nobuharu, Endo Makoto, Nakayama Robert, Hoshi Manabu, Yonemoto Tsukasa, Kiyotani Chikako, Okita Natsuko, Baba Eishi, Muto Manabu, Kikuchi Iwaho, Morishige Ken-ichirou, Tsugawa Koichiro, Nishiyama Hiroyuki, Hosoi Hajime, Tanimoto Mitsune, Kawai Akira, Sugiyama Kazuhiko, Boku Narikazu, Yonemura Masato, Hayashi Naoko, Aoki Daisuke, Osuga Yutaka, Suzuki NaoORCID
Abstract
AbstractIn 2017, the Japan Society of Clinical Oncology (JSCO) published the JSCO Clinical Practice Guidelines 2017 for Fertility Preservation in Childhood, Adolescent, and Young Adult Cancer Patients. These were the first Japanese guidelines to address issues of oncofertility. In this field of medicine, sustained close cooperation between oncologists and reproductive specialists is essential from the diagnosis of cancer until many years after completion of cancer treatment. These JSCO guidelines were intended to guide multidisciplinary medical staff in considering the availability of fertility preservation options and to help them decide whether to provide fertility preservation to childhood, adolescent, and young adult cancer patients before treatment starts, with the ultimate goal of improving patient survivorship. The guidelines are presented as Parts 1 and 2. This article (Part 1) summarizes the goals of the guidelines and the methods used to develop them and provides an overview of fertility preservation across all oncology areas. It includes general remarks on the basic concepts surrounding fertility preservation and explanations of the impacts of cancer treatment on gonadal function by sex and treatment modality and of the options for protecting/preserving gonadal function and makes recommendations based on 4 clinical questions. Part 2 of these guidelines provides specific recommendations on fertility preservation in 8 types of cancer (gynecologic, breast, urologic, pediatric, hematologic, bone and soft tissue, brain, and digestive).
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
Oncology,Hematology,General Medicine,Surgery
Reference88 articles.
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