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Home > Newsroom > News Archive Pregnancy after breast cancer is possibleU-M expert says new cancer treatments, technologies give women more hope of preserving fertilityA University of Michigan Health Minute update on important health issues-added 10/1/07 Ann Arbor - Once Alyssa Tushman knew her young son would not grow up motherless, her next question was whether he would be an only child.
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(Windows Media Player required) Most women are in their 50s or older and thinking about grandchildren when they are diagnosed with breast cancer. But what about that increasing number of women in their 20s and 30s who are diagnosed at a point when they are dating, getting married and just starting their family? Despite toxic chemotherapy regimens that can mess with ovarian function, it is possible - and safe - for many women to conceive after breast cancer treatment, according to Daniel F. Hayes, M.D., clinical director of the breast oncology program at the University of Michigan Comprehensive Cancer Center. "Fertility is something we talk to patients about. We try to give them their odds. That discussion is going to be specific for each patient, because it depends how old she is, whether she should get chemotherapy, what kind of chemotherapy, and whether she cares about maintaining fertility," Hayes says. "Most of us in the field have not been discouraging women from becoming pregnant. What we have learned more are some of the caveats."
Tushman's period returned about three months after she finished treatment. She was diagnosed with breast cancer just four months after giving birth to her first son. "I was terrified my son was going to grow up without his mother. That was the worst, scariest part of the whole thing," says Tushman, now 31. A year after her treatment ended, she easily got pregnant. Now she's pregnant for a third time. "Getting pregnant for the second time was a big decision. As much as I wanted it, we were told by my oncologists it's a big decision. Because if, God forbid, my cancer comes back, I had to discuss with my husband w hether he'd be OK as a single parent with two or three children. We decided it was worth it. I don't want to live like I'm going to die," Tushman says. For some women, newer hormone-based therapies can further affect fertility. These drugs are often given for longer periods of time, up to five years. To become pregnant, women would have to stop taking the hormone therapy for a period of time. "That's something I discourage women from doing because the benefits of the therapy are so great," Hayes says. If a woman does become pregnant after breast cancer treatment, it does not seem to have an effect on her health or the baby's health. Studies show the risk of birth defects or miscarriages is not any higher in a woman who has had chemotherapy. Pregnancy also is not likely to cause a woman's breast cancer to return. At the same time, any traces of breast cancer that may be in a woman's bloodstream have never been shown to cross into the baby's. Tushman is thrilled with her decision to have more children and says she has learned never to take life for granted. "My boys are amazing. They are the light of my life and my husband's life. We love every minute of it, we really do," she says. About breast cancer:
ResourcesU-M Cancer Center Breast Cancer Information pageU-M Cancer AnswerLine™: 800-865-1125 U-M Fertility Counseling & Gamete Cryopreservation Program National Cancer Institute: Breast Cancer and Pregnancy
Written by Nicole Fawcett
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