Ovarian transplantation appears to restore ovulatory function robustly. Successful pregnancies, including one after cryopreservation, bode well for application to fertility preservation.
PurposeTo report the results of cryopreserved ovary tissue transplantation for leukemia and other cancers, in a single US center.MethodsOne hundred eight females between age 6 and (median age 24) 35 were referred for possible ovary tissue cryopreservation over a 20-year period, with either slow freeze or vitrification. Thus far 13 patients returned up to 18 years later to have their tissue transplanted back.ResultsAll 13 patients had return of ovarian function 5 months post transplant with regular menstrual cycling. AMH rose to very high levels as the FSH declined to normal. Four months later, the AMH again declined to very low levels. Nonetheless, the grafts remained functional for up to 5 years or longer. Ten of the 13 (77%) became spontaneously pregnant at least once, resulting in 13 healthy babies. A total of 24 healthy babies have been born 11 from fresh transplanted ovarian tissue and 13 from cryopreserved transplanted ovarian tissue.Conclusions(1) Ovary tissue cryopreservation is a robust method for preserving a woman’s fertility. (2) Cortical tissue pressure may be a key regulator of primordial follicle arrest, recruitment, and ovarian longevity. (3) This is the only such series yet reported in the USA.
Ovary cryopreservation and transplantation has garnered increasing interest as a possible method to preserve fertility for cancer patients and to study ovarian resting follicle recruitment. Eleven consecutive women underwent fresh donor ovary transplantation, and 11 underwent cryopreserved ovary auto-transplantation in the same centre, with the same surgeon. Of the 11 fresh transplant recipients, who were all young but menopausal, nine women had normal ovarian cortex transplanted from an identical twin sister, and two had a fresh allograft from a non-identical sister. In the second group, 11 women with cancer had ovarian tissue cryopreserved before bone marrow transplant, and then after years of therapeutically induced menopause, underwent cryopreserved ovarian cortex autotransplantation. Recovery of ovarian function and follicle recruitment was assessed in all 22 recipients, and the potential for pregnancy was further investigated in 19 (11 fresh and 8 cryopreserved) with over 1-year follow-up. In all recipients, normal FSH levels and menstruation returned by about 150 days, and anti-Müllerian hormone reached much greater than normal concentrations by about 170 days. Anti-Müllerian hormone levels then fell below normal by about 240 days and remained at that lower level. Seventeen babies have been born to these 11 fresh and eight cryopreserved ovary transplant recipients.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.