Study Results
The study team has not published outcome measurements, participant flow, or safety data for this trial yet. Check back later for updates.
Basic Information
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COMPLETED
NA
2 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2015-05-31
2020-06-30
Brief Summary
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Detailed Description
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Twenty subjects/year will be participating in this study.
Participation in this study will last until the patient's ovarian tissue is all used, or the patient decides to drop out of the study, or for the rest of her life. Freezing of ovarian tissue can be done only for research. Thawing and future use of the tissue to start a pregnancy must be done as part of a research program. After the age of 18, the patient will decide how and at what institution she wishes to use her own tissue in the future, for the purposes of becoming pregnant. The number of visits will be decided by the surgical procedure performed. The Investigators will contact the patient by phone, email, or mail until she has turned 18 years old, used her tissue or dropped out of the study (whichever comes first) to follow the patient's medical and fertility status over time and to ask questions about any future use of her frozen tissue and the possible results of the treatment. Depending on the patient's age at the time of enrollment, follow-up might be up to 30 years.
PURPOSE Primary objective: To assess resumption/initiation of menses after surgical ovarian preservation (ovarian tissue explant followed by freezing and autologous transplantation).
Secondary objective: To assess pre- and post-treatment production of various hormones, i.e., anti-mullerian hormone (AMH), insulin-like growth factor-1 (IGF-1), inhibin-B, follicle stimulating hormone (FSH), luteinizing hormone (LH), and estradiol, by serum and histological measurements.
Tertiary objective: To assess long-term sexual development, fertility competence, and lifespan of ovarian preservation via surgical autotransplant.
RATIONALE Chemotherapy treatment with alkylating agents and/or total body irradiation will prevent normal pubertal development of uterus, ovaries, and breasts because of primary ovarian insufficiency (POI). Explant and autologous transplantation of ovarian tissue will prevent ovarian insufficiency and allow normal sexual development through puberty and fertility competence.
RESEARCH DESIGN Prospective cohort study.
STUDY PROCEDURES Subject Recruitment and Screening- Subjects will be recruited by referral from the St. Jude Children's Research Hospital (SJCRH) and Methodist-Le Bonheur physicians to the Reproductive Medicine clinics held by Dr. Laura Detti. Patients will undergo an informed consent process in accordance with St. Jude Children's Research Hospital (SJCRH) and Methodist-Le Bonheur Institutional Review Boards.
Screening Visit- Complete medical history and physical exam; vital signs, height, and weight. Psychological Consult on impact of therapy.
Laboratory testing- Lab results for Estradiol, follicle stimulating hormone (FSH), luteinizing hormone (LH), Anti-Mullerian hormone (AMH), Inhibin B, will be obtained from the patients' clinical charts. In addition, Electrocardiogram (ECG) (12-lead); Bone age scan (if pre-pubertal), Pelvic ultrasound (transabdominal or transvaginal, depending on the patient's age) will be obtained from the patients' clinical charts. If a pelvic ultrasound has not been obtained prior to surgery, the procedure will be performed under anesthesia prior to the patient undergoing surgery for ovarian tissue harvesting).
Surgical Procedures- Unilateral oophorectomy will be performed by laparoscopy prior to undergoing chemo-radiation treatment as specified above. Subsequent ovarian cortex autotransplant will be performed by laparoscopy after the patients have been declared cured by their physicians.
Laparoscopic procedures- Upon general anesthesia is induced, attention will be turned to the patient's abdomen where 3-4 0.5 cm skin incisions will be performed (one in the umbilical fold and 2 lateral incisions; possibly, a 4th suprapubic incision). Disposable, bladed, trocars will be inserted in the abdominal cavity. The ovaries will be identified and a unilateral oophorectomy will be performed by retroperitoneal clamping/dissection of the infundibulo-pelvic and utero-ovarian ligaments.
A bipolar electrode will be used to assure accurate hemostasis and irrigation will be performed as needed. Upon retrieval of the trocars from the abdomen, the skin incisions will be reapproximated with 4-0 vycril sutures.
The second laparoscopic procedure will be done to perform autologous ovarian tissue transplant by suturing the thawed cortex fragments to the recipient ovary using 7-0 Prolene (Ethicon, Johnson and Johnson, USA), using the technique described by Silber et al. (Silber et al., 2005; Silber and Gosden, 2007) applied during laparotomy for transplantation.
As the transplanted tissue exhausts its function after the 1st autologous transplant, other laparoscopic procedures might become necessary over the years to transplant the rest of the cryopreserved tissue until no more tissue is available in the cryobank storage.
Freezing Procedure- The process of vitrification will be started in the Operating Room or in the lab within 120 minutes from collection of the sample and will be completed in the University of Tennessee Center for Reproductive Medicine laboratory. The tissue will be subdivided into numerous vials for individual storage/thawing. This will allow selective thawing for autotransplant over multiple procedures, if necessary.
Embryology laboratory procedures- The ovarian tissue that is stored for the patients will be used for autologous transplant. However, other techniques that are performed in the embryology laboratory may be available to the patients in the near future and might represent the best option for fertility preservation in patients with blood-borne cancers (i.e.: leukemia), in whom the risk of re-seeding cancer cells with tissue transplant is high.
Follow-Up Evaluation- Study treatment will include a post-operative visit and following scheduled follow-up visits for the patients' initial disease during which a complete physical exam and psychological evaluation will be conducted, and laboratory testing will be obtained for follicle stimulating hormone (FSH), luteinizing hormone (LH), anti-mullerian hormone (AMH), and Inhibin B.
Visits will be scheduled one month after explant and every 6-12 months until autotransplant of tissue and afterwards.
Laboratory testing, Electrocardiogram (ECG) (12-lead), Bone age, Pelvic ultrasound may be repeated yearly, as part of the patient's scheduled follow-ups. Bone age assessment will stop when a bone age of 18 years is achieved.
Patients who are going to develop ovarian insufficiency prior to or after puberty will undergo estrogen/progesterone therapy as per our institutional protocols.
Follow-up will continue until the patient stays enrolled in the study or until she reaches 40 years of age, or she goes in menopause and does not have, or does not desire, further tissue for transplantation.
Conditions
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Study Design
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NA
SINGLE_GROUP
TREATMENT
NONE
Study Groups
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Diagnostic Procedure
Surgery - Unilateral surgical removal of ovary, freezing of tissue, post cancer cure autotransplant
surgery
Surgical Procedures- Unilateral oophorectomy will be performed by laparoscopy prior to undergoing chemo-radiation treatment as specified above. Subsequent ovarian cortex autotransplant will be performed by laparoscopy after the patients have been declared cured by their physicians.
Interventions
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surgery
Surgical Procedures- Unilateral oophorectomy will be performed by laparoscopy prior to undergoing chemo-radiation treatment as specified above. Subsequent ovarian cortex autotransplant will be performed by laparoscopy after the patients have been declared cured by their physicians.
Other Intervention Names
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Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
Exclusion Criteria
2. Patients for whom the primary oncologist and/or pathologist discourage entering the protocol because of specific condition characteristics. These include, but are not limited to, cancers with high risk of ovarian metastasis such as leukemia and non-Hodgkin lymphoma.
3. Patients with known positive bone marrow for leukemia or solid tumor.
4. Patients whose tumor is in an organ that communicates with the peritoneum and peritoneal sampling at time of primary excision shows evidence of disease.
5. Patients older than 40 years of age.
6. Males.
8 Years
40 Years
FEMALE
No
Sponsors
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University of Tennessee
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Principal Investigators
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Laura Detti, M.D.
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
Associate Professor, UTennessee Health Science Center
Locations
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Methodist/LeBonheur Hospital
Germantown, Tennessee, United States
LeBonheur Children's Hospital
Memphis, Tennessee, United States
Regional One Health Ob-Gyn Clinic
Memphis, Tennessee, United States
Regional One Health, Regional Medical Center, Operating Room
Memphis, Tennessee, United States
Methodist University Hospital
Memphis, Tennessee, United States
St. Jude Children's Research Hospital
Memphis, Tennessee, United States
Baptist Memorial Hospital
Memphis, Tennessee, United States
Countries
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References
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Other Identifiers
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13-02542-FB
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id