Abstract
Curative therapy for sickle cell disease (SCD) currently requires gonadotoxic conditioning that can impair future fertility. Fertility outcomes after curative therapy are likely affected by pre-transplant ovarian reserve or semen analysis parameters that may already be abnormal from SCD-related damage or hydroxyurea treatment. Outcomes are also likely affected by the conditioning regimen. Conditioning with myeloablative busulfan and cyclophosphamide causes serious gonadotoxicity particularly among post-pubertal females. Reduced-intensity and non-myeloablative conditioning may be acutely less gonadotoxic, but more short and long-term fertility outcome data after these approaches is needed. Fertility preservation including oocyte/embryo, ovarian tissue, sperm, and experimental testicular tissue cryopreservation should be offered to patients with SCD pursing curative therapy. Regardless of HSCT outcome, longitudinal post-HSCT fertility care is required.
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Nickel, R. S., Maher, J. Y., Hsieh, M. H., Davis, M. F., Hsieh, M. M., & Pecker, L. H. (2022, May 1). Fertility after Curative Therapy for Sickle Cell Disease: A Comprehensive Review to Guide Care. Journal of Clinical Medicine. MDPI. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm11092318
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