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OHSU
Is Part Of National Effort To Preserve, Restore Fertility In
Women With Cancer |
The Oregon National Primate Research Center and the
Oregon Health & Science University School of Medicine
have been named to a national team of institutions
hoping to preserve or restore fertility in women
battling cancer. The Oncofertility Consortium, funded
for five years by the National Institutes of Health,
features participants from five universities and
comprises researchers, physicians, engineers,
educators, social workers and medical ethicists.
“Biomedical research has helped save the lives of many
women battling cancer,” explained
Richard Stouffer,
Ph.D., director of the research team at OHSU.
Stouffer also directs ONPRC’s reproductive sciences
division and is a professor of obstetrics and
gynecology in the OHSU School of Medicine. “However,
the powerful chemotherapy drugs and radiation used to
beat cancer can also result in a loss of reproductive
function, which is a tremendous blow to young cancer
patients who hope to have children. The bottom-line
goal for this research team across the United States
is to help these women through various avenues
including research, treatment and counseling.”
Additional members of the OHSU research team include
Mary Zelinski, Ph.D.,
an affiliate assistant scientist at ONPRC, and
David Lee, M.D.,
an assistant professor of obstetrics and gynecology,
reproductive endocrinology and infertility in the OHSU
School of Medicine.
Together the scientists are working on methods for
restoring fertility in cancer patients by studying
rhesus macaque monkeys who have reproductive systems
very similar to humans. Specifically, the team is
hoping to gain additional understanding about the
growth of follicles in the ovaries and either to
preserve or restart this function. Follicle growth is
necessary for the development of oocytes (fertile
eggs) in the ovaries.
Past research has demonstrated that cancer therapies
often destroy follicles in the ovaries, thereby
reducing fertility. Working with researchers at
Northwestern University and University of
Missouri-Columbia, the OHSU group will investigate
methods to freeze and store monkey ovary tissue and,
following thawing, to grow follicles in culture or to
promote follicle growth after transplantation back
into the monkey.
In 2004 Lee and colleagues published results in the
journal Nature demonstrating great strides in
re-establishing fertility in a rhesus macaque monkey
after ovarian tissue transplantation that resulted in
a successful birth. This research aims to build upon
these earlier findings.
“Because this is a relatively new field, OHSU is home
to one of the only fertility preservation programs in
the country,” explained Lee, who serves as director of
the OHSU Fertile Future Program. “Past fertility
research milestones at OHSU include our research in
monkeys who underwent ovarian tissue transplantation
and also human studies such as the first human
pregnancy from frozen-thawed eggs.
While the Oregon researchers conduct their research,
other team members at the University of California,
San Diego; the University of Pennsylvania, the
University of Missouri-Columbia and the lead
institution: Northwestern University will conduct
additional studies. These studies will relate to
preserving reproductive tissues for future
transplantation, studying human follicles, and global
and social studies of the oncofertility issue.
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Source:
Oregon
Health & Science University
Published on 20th September 2007
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