TITLE:
Case Report ex Vivo Oocyte Collection to Maintain Fertility in a Patient with Micropapillary Serous Borderline Ovarian Tumor
AUTHORS:
Jitka Rezacova, Petr Safar, Lucie Petrouskova, Blanka Koubkova, Josef Plihal, Jana Rutarova, Renata Valesova, Katerina Dohnalova, Jakub Rezac, Pavel Darebny, Marketa Bahnikova, Jaroslav Feyereisl
KEYWORDS:
Borderline Ovarian Tumor, Radical Surgery, In Vitro Oocyte Collection, Maintain Fertility, Oncofertility
JOURNAL NAME:
Advances in Reproductive Sciences,
Vol.9 No.2,
May
31,
2021
ABSTRACT: Background: Approximately 11% of cancer cases are diagnosed in people of childbearing age. Borderline ovarian tumors (BOTs) make up 10%-15% of all ovarian epithelial malignancies. More than one-third of all BOTs occur in women under 40 years of age. Maintaining the fertility of cured patients is the common goal of both oncologists and reproductologists. Aim: Giving young women diagnosed with a prognostically worse type of BOT and after bilateral adnexectomy the possibility to have their genetically own children by the method of ex vivo oocyte collection. Case Presentation: A 34-year-old nulligravid woman with BOT underwent right laparoscopic salpingo-oophorectomy. Histologically, a serious borderline tumor with a micropapillary pattern and a tumor locus on the ovarian surface were found. Due to histopathology, the oncologist recommended re-staging surgery: laparotomy, left salpingo-oophorectomy, omentectomy and hysterectomy. The patient refused a hysterectomy as she was planning to get pregnant with her partner. To maintain her fertility, controlled hormonal hyperstimulation and ex vivo aspiration of follicles from the ovary after salpingo-oophorectomy was performed. Ex vivo follicle expiration yielded 10 oocytes. 9 mature oocytes were fertilized by ICSI. The 6 embryos of the highest quality were individually frozen by vitrification. Cryoembryotransfer will be scheduled with the consent of the oncologist. Conclusion: This method is suitable for young women with BOT after bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy in whom ex vivo oocyte collection prevents possible leakage of tumor cells into the abdominal cavity, unlike during the conventional in vivo collection prior to surgery.