1. Life satisfaction regarding the ability to have children among female cancer survivors
- Author
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Amy Fothergill, Penelope P. Howards, Ann C. Mertens, and Jessica B. Spencer
- Subjects
Cancer Research ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Assisted reproductive technology ,business.industry ,media_common.quotation_subject ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Cancer ,Life satisfaction ,Fertility ,medicine.disease ,Breast cancer ,Oncology ,Feeling ,Quality of life ,Family medicine ,Physical therapy ,Medicine ,Reproductive history ,business ,media_common - Abstract
248 Background: Some cancer treatments can cause sub-fertility in female cancer survivors, which has led to recommendations that all reproductive-aged cancer patients receive fertility counseling at the time of cancer diagnosis. However, little is known about how reproductive-aged cancer survivors feel about their quality of life with respect to their ability to have children. Methods: The FUCHSIA Women’s Study recruited reproductive-aged (22-45 years) female cancer survivors diagnosed with cancer between the ages of 20-35 years, who were at least 2 years post-diagnosis (median 7). All reportable malignant cancers and in situ breast cancer diagnosed from 1990 to 2009 in Georgia were eligible. Participants (n = 1,282) completed a detailed interview about their reproductive history including questions about their feelings about their ability to get pregnant and to have more children as well as their comfort with assisted reproductive technology (ART). Women were classified as premenopausal or menopausal, which included surgical and non-surgical menopause. Results: At the time of the interview, 31% of the study participants did not have a child. Overall, childless women were less likely to feel that having a biologic child was important (46%) than women who had a child (89%). However, 61% of childless, premenopausal women wanted to have a biologic child in the future, and 89% of menopausal women without children reported that they would have liked to have a child if they could. Menopausal women without children were more likely to report being comfortable with the idea of using ART to become pregnant (67% vs. 38% of menopausal women with children). A quarter of premenopausal women without children indicated that they would be dissatisfied with life if they were unable to have a child, and 10% of menopausal women without children indicated they were dissatisfied with life because they could not have children. Conclusions: In general, women without children were more likely to report a poorer quality of life with respect to their reproductive potential. However, our results suggest there is a complex relation between women’s reproductive desires and their feelings about their actual situation.
- Published
- 2016
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