Preserve Your Fertility after Transplant

Most, but not all, patients will become infertile after transplant. Fortunately, there are options available for people who wish to have children after a transplant.

Options for Males to Preserve Fertility

family walking near lakeMost males can bank their sperm before transplant. Even if you don't think you want children, sperm banking is worth considering, you may change your mind later in life. Having your sperm banked preserves that option.

Discussing sperm banking with an adolescent who needs a transplant can be challenging and emotionally upsetting for the young man. Consider consulting the hospital social worker or a therapist about how best to approach this delicate matter with your child.

If you do not bank your sperm prior to transplant, a procedure called testicular sperm retrieval may be an option after transplant. Even if there is no sperm in the ejaculate, there may be viable sperm in the testes that can be extracted and used to fertilize a woman's egg and create an embryo.

Options for Females to Preserve Fertility

For women, it may be possible to collect eggs prior to transplant, fertilize them with male sperm to create embryos, and then freeze the embryos for later use. This procedure requires several weeks and may not be an option for patients who need to proceed quickly to transplant.

After transplant, a woman may be able to become pregnant by having the embryos implanted in her womb. This procedure, called in-vitro fertilization, is not always successful, but several transplant survivors have conceived children by this method.

It is also possible to collect and freeze a woman's eggs without fertilizing them with male sperm. However, unfertilized eggs are less likely to survive the freezing and thawing than fertilized eggs.

Another experimental option for women is freezing ovarian tissue. Ovarian tissue is removed during a short, outpatient surgical procedure and then frozen. The tissue can later be implanted into a woman's ovary, where it may produce eggs.

If You Do Not Wish to Become Pregnant 

Although most patients are infertile after transplant, several transplant survivors have had children after transplant without any medical intervention.

If you do not plan to have children after transplant, use a form of contraception to protect against an unwanted pregnancy.

Additional Resources 

Live Strong/Fertile Hope offers information about parenthood options after cancer treatment, referrals to fertility clinics in the US, and questions to ask fertility and adoption agencies.

The Oncofertility Consortium provides information about fertility preservation and links to clinics that offer fertility preservation options to cancer patients.

Building a Family after Transplant

A third of patients who undergo a stem cell transplant are either pediatric, adolescent or young adult patients for whom fertility after transplant can be a major concern. A variety of fertility preservation options prior to transplant, and assisted reproduction options after transplant, may enable a stem cell transplant recipient to build a family after transplant.