儿童癌症和血液系统疾病会在诊断时对精原细胞数量产生负面影响:对男性生育力保存队列的回顾性研究。
Childhood cancer and hematological disorders negatively affect spermatogonial quantity at diagnosis: a retrospective study of a male fertility preservation cohort.
机构信息
Reproductive Biology Laboratory, Center for Reproductive Medicine, Amsterdam UMC, University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
Research Institute Amsterdam Reproduction & Development, Amsterdam UMC, University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
出版信息
Hum Reprod. 2023 Mar 1;38(3):359-370. doi: 10.1093/humrep/dead004.
STUDY QUESTION
What is the impact of cancer or hematological disorders on germ cells in pediatric male patients?
SUMMARY ANSWER
Spermatogonial quantity is reduced in testes of prepubertal boys diagnosed with cancer or severe hematological disorder compared to healthy controls and this reduction is disease and age dependent: patients with central nervous system cancer (CNS tumors) and hematological disorders, as well as boys <7 years are the most affected.
WHAT IS KNOWN ALREADY
Fertility preservation in pediatric male patients is considered based on the gonadotoxicity of selected treatments. Although treatment effects on germ cells have been extensively investigated, limited data are available on the effect of the disease on the prepubertal male gonad. Of the few studies investigating the effects of cancer or hematologic disorders on testicular function and germ cell quantity in prepuberty, the results are inconsistent. However, recent studies suggested impairments before the initiation of known gonadotoxic therapy. Understanding which diseases and at what age affect the germ cell pool in pediatric patients before treatment is critical to optimize strategies and counseling for fertility preservation.
STUDY DESIGN, SIZE, DURATION: This multicenter retrospective cohort study included 101 boys aged <14 years with extra-cerebral cancer (solid tumors), CNS tumors, leukemia/lymphoma (blood cancer), or non-malignant hematological disorders, who were admitted for a fertility preservation programme between 2002 and 2018.
PARTICIPANTS/MATERIALS, SETTING, METHODS: In addition to clinical data, we analyzed measurements of testicular volume and performed histological staining on testicular biopsies obtained before treatment, at cryopreservation, to evaluate number of spermatogonia per tubular cross-section, tubular fertility index, and the most advanced germ cell type prior to chemo-/radiotherapy. The controls were data simulations with summary statistics from original studies reporting healthy prepubertal boys' testes characteristics.
MAIN RESULTS AND THE ROLE OF CHANCE
Prepubertal patients with childhood cancer or hematological disorders were more likely to have significantly reduced spermatogonial quantity compared to healthy controls (48.5% versus 31.0% prevalence, respectively). The prevalence of patients with reduced spermatogonial quantity was highest in the CNS tumor (56.7%) and the hematological disorder (55.6%) groups, including patients with hydroxyurea pre-treated sickle cell disease (58.3%) and patients not exposed to hydroxyurea (50%). Disease also adversely impacted spermatogonial distribution and differentiation. Irrespective of disease, we observed the highest spermatogonial quantity reduction in patients <7 years of age.
LIMITATIONS, REASONS FOR CAUTION: For ethical reasons, we could not collect spermatogonial quantity data in healthy prepubertal boys as controls and thus deployed statistical simulation on data from literature. Also, our results should be interpreted considering low patient numbers per (sub)group.
WIDER IMPLICATIONS OF THE FINDINGS
Cancers, especially CNS tumors, and severe hematological disorders can affect spermatogonial quantity in prepubertal boys before treatment. Consequently, these patients may have a higher risk of depleted spermatogonia following therapies, resulting in persistent infertility. Therefore, patient counseling prior to disease treatment and timing of fertility preservation should not only be based on treatment regimes, but also on diagnoses and age.
STUDY FUNDING/COMPETING INTEREST(S): This study was supported by Marie Curie Initial Training Network (ITN) (EU-FP7-PEOPLE-2013-ITN) funded by European Commision grant no. 603568; ZonMW Translational Adult stem cell research (TAS) grant no. 116003002. No competing interests.
TRIAL REGISTRATION NUMBER
N/A.
研究问题
癌症或血液系统疾病对儿科男性患者的生殖细胞有何影响?
总结答案
与健康对照组相比,患有癌症或严重血液系统疾病的青春期前男孩的睾丸中精原细胞数量减少,这种减少与疾病和年龄有关:患有中枢神经系统癌症(CNS 肿瘤)和血液系统疾病的患者,以及<7 岁的男孩受到的影响最大。
已知情况
基于选定治疗方法的性腺毒性,考虑对儿科男性患者进行生育力保存。尽管已经广泛研究了治疗对生殖细胞的影响,但关于疾病对青春期前男性性腺的影响的数据有限。在少数研究癌症或血液系统疾病对睾丸功能和精原细胞数量的影响的研究中,结果不一致。然而,最近的研究表明,在已知的性腺毒性治疗开始之前就存在损害。了解在治疗前哪些疾病和年龄会影响儿科患者的生殖细胞库,对于优化生育力保存的策略和咨询至关重要。
研究设计、大小和持续时间:这是一项多中心回顾性队列研究,纳入了 2002 年至 2018 年间因生育力保存计划而入院的 101 名<14 岁的患有脑外癌症(实体瘤)、CNS 肿瘤、白血病/淋巴瘤(血液癌)或非恶性血液系统疾病的男孩。
参与者/材料、设置和方法:除了临床数据外,我们还分析了睾丸体积的测量值,并在治疗前、冷冻保存时进行了睾丸活检组织学染色,以评估每个管状横截面上的精原细胞数、管状生育指数以及在化疗/放疗前最先进的生殖细胞类型。对照组是使用来自报告健康青春期前男孩睾丸特征的原始研究的汇总统计数据进行的模拟数据。
主要结果和机会的作用
与健康对照组相比,患有儿童癌症或血液系统疾病的青春期前患者的精原细胞数量明显减少(分别为 48.5%和 31.0%的患病率)。CNS 肿瘤(56.7%)和血液系统疾病(55.6%)组中患病率最高的是患有羟基脲预处理镰状细胞病的患者(58.3%)和未暴露于羟基脲的患者(50%)。疾病也对精原细胞的分布和分化产生了不利影响。无论疾病如何,我们都观察到<7 岁的患者精原细胞数量减少最多。
局限性、谨慎的原因:由于伦理原因,我们无法像对照组那样收集健康青春期前男孩的精原细胞数量数据,因此我们在统计学模拟中使用了文献中的数据。此外,应考虑到每组患者数量较少,来解释我们的结果。
更广泛的影响
癌症,尤其是 CNS 肿瘤和严重的血液系统疾病,可能会在治疗前影响青春期前男孩的精原细胞数量。因此,这些患者在接受治疗后可能会有更高的精原细胞耗竭风险,导致持续的不育。因此,在疾病治疗前和生育力保存时机的患者咨询不仅应基于治疗方案,还应基于诊断和年龄。
研究资助/利益冲突:本研究得到了 Marie Curie 初始培训网络(ITN)(欧盟 FP7-PEOPLE-2013-ITN)的支持,由欧洲委员会授予的 603568 号拨款;ZonMW 转化成人干细胞研究(TAS)拨款号 116003002。无利益冲突。
临床试验注册号
无。