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Fertility Drugs Cancer

Fertility Drugs and Their Relationship to Cancer

Media coverage of an article by Dr. Alice Whittemore of the Stanford University Ovarian Cancer Collaborative Group which appeared in the American Journal of Epidemiology several years ago has created some anxiety amongst patients who have taken fertility medications. To help patients understand how this may relate to themselves, HRC has researched this issue.

In the Stanford report, three of the 12 studies contained women who remembered taking fertility drugs. Out of the 2,197 ovarian cancer patient histories reviewed, 31 patients remembered taking fertility drugs. However, it is not known what kind of medication the women took, for how long or in what dosages. Stanford's news release itself stressed this fact: "The drugs were given before the 1970s, so they were probably given for routine pregnancy as opposed to use for in vitro fertilization. The association between ovarian cancer and fertility drugs was seen principally in those who never became pregnant, suggesting that possibly the type of infertility rather than the drug use itself may be associated with risk (of ovarian cancer)".

The National Institute of Health (NIH) recently recommended only selective ovarian cancer screening in women. They stated that annual ovarian cancer screening is justifiable only for a small well-defined segment of the population, those being women who have two second-degree relatives or one first and one second degree relative who have had ovarian cancer. The NIH, however, did not specifically look at the issue of women who have fertility medications and they suggest more studies are needed in this subgroup.

Notwithstanding the above, as a precautionary measure, HRC recommends that its patients and others who have had treatments with fertility drugs should have ovarian cancer screening performed once a year in much the same way as they have routine Pap tests done. Ovarian cancer screening includes pelvic examination, transvaginal ultrasonography, and possible measurement of serum levels of the tumor marker CA-125.

Studies have shown that several treatments and factors can reduce the risk of ovarian cancer. For example, pregnancy has been shown to reduce the risk of developing this disease by 40%. Recent studies suggest that tubal ligation, hysterectomy, and prophylactic oophorectomy after completing child bearing for women of high risk (such as those who have relatives who have had ovarian cancer ) may also reduce the risk of developing this disease. Multiple studies have demonstrated a 40-50% decrease in ovarian cancer in women who use oral contraceptives.

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