It can be difficult to predict whether your fertility will be affected or if it will return to normal when your cancer treatment is over. Before your treatment starts, your doctor can refer you and your partner (if you have one) to a fertility clinic.
At the clinic you will be given information and counselling about possible fertility treatments and their rates of success. Fertility treatments can be time-consuming and take up a lot of emotional and physical energy. This can be difficult when you're already coping with cancer. They can also be expensive. Some women may feel that the chances of success are too low, especially when they balance this with the demands of the treatment. Other women feel that anything that could improve their chances of having a child in the future is worthwhile.
You may be able to store embryos (fertilised eggs), or to have your eggs frozen and stored for future use. Ovarian tissue which contains eggs can be removed for future use, but this is still a very experimental technique.
Embryo storage may be available on the NHS, but you often have to pay privately for other treatments.
Egg collection
Freezing and storing embryos or your eggs means that you need to have your eggs collected. This has to be done before treatment starts. Some women need to start their cancer treatment immediately. In this situation it is not usually possible to delay treatment to have the ovaries stimulated to produce eggs (ovarian stimulation).
The whole process of egg collection takes 4–6 weeks. Hormones are given by injection to stimulate the ovaries to produce more eggs than normal. To increase the chances of achieving a pregnancy, as many eggs as possible are collected (usually at least six).
If you have breast cancer (or any hormone dependent cancer) there is a possible risk that the hormones used to stimulate the ovaries may make the cancer grow. For this reason, it may not be advisable to have ovarian stimulation in these situations. Your doctors will discuss this with you. It may be possible to collect one or two eggs without stimulation. But having only one or two eggs reduces the chances of a successful pregnancy.
Eggs are normally collected using an ultrasound-guided needle which is passed through the wall of the vagina. This is usually done by giving you a sedative to relax you or under a local or general anaesthetic.
Storing embryos
To make an embryo, sperm is needed to fertilise the eggs. If the sperm is your partner's, both of you must sign a consent form and neither can use the embryo to start a pregnancy without the other's permission. If you have no partner, sperm from a donor can be used. As there is a shortage of sperm donors in the UK, this may be difficult.
Once the eggs have been collected they can be fertilised using IVF (in-vitro fertilisation) and embryos can then be frozen. IVF involves putting your eggs together with sperm in a test-tube for fertilisation to occur and to produce embryos.
Storing unfertilised eggs
This is a newer, more experimental technique which is very much less successful than freezing embryos. The eggs are frozen until needed. When they are later thawed they may be fertilised by a sperm (from your partner or a donor) using a new technique called ICSI, which is explained later.
Storing ovarian tissue
A new and experimental technique is to take and store samples of ovarian tissue that contain some eggs. The ovarian tissue can be put back into the body at a later date. This technique is at a very early stage of development and has not been widely used.
Using donated eggs and sperm
It may be possible to use donated sperm if you are able to collect eggs and want to store embryos, but don't have a partner. There is a shortage of sperm donors in the UK, so this may not be straightforward.
If the cancer treatment has caused permanent infertility and you were unable to collect some of your eggs before treatment, you may consider using donated eggs.
Everyone who donates eggs or sperm is carefully selected. Usually an egg donor will be matched as closely as possible so that the eye and hair colour, physical build and ethnic origin are the same as the woman who can no longer produce eggs. Sperm donors will also be closely matched. The donor has to be fit and healthy with no medical problems and will be tested for various infectious diseases.
Choosing to use donated eggs or sperm can be a difficult decision and will often need very careful consideration. It isn't going to suit everyone. Your doctor or nurse at the fertility clinic can discuss this with you further.