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Volume 352:1392-1393 March 31, 2005 Number 13
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Preservation of Fertility

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Edited by Togas Tulandi and Roger G. Gosden. 279 pp., illustrated. London, Taylor & Francis, 2004. $169.95. ISBN 1-84214-242-9.

In September 2004, a woman from Belgium gave birth to a child after receiving an ovarian-tissue transplant. This was a culmination of several efforts to preserve fertility in women who undergo treatment for cancer. Radiotherapy and chemotherapy are particularly toxic to eggs and sperm, and to the trauma of the diagnosis of cancer and its subsequent treatment is added the tragedy of subsequent infertility. For young women in whom ovarian damage is likely to result from treatment for cancer, there are various possibilities, including the freezing of eggs, the creation of embryos that can be subsequently frozen, the storage of . . . [Full Text of this Article]




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