Abstract
Background: Oncofertility is a developing field of increasing importance, particularly in pediatric oncology, where most patients are likely to survive long-term and have not yet had the opportunity to have children. Aims: We performed a quality improvement initiative to increase our rates of fertility preservation counseling and referral through the implementation of a pediatric oncofertility team, and we report outcomes 7 years following implementation of our initiative. Methods and results: We compare our baseline oncofertility survey to 44 post-intervention survey respondents and electronic medical record documentation for 149 patients treated in 2019. Ninety-five percent of post-intervention survey respondents recalled fertility counseling (baseline 70%, p =.004) and 89.3% were appropriately referred for fertility preservation (baseline 50%, p =.017). Counseling was documented in 60.4% of charts; 81% of patients analyzed by chart review were appropriately referred for fertility preservation. Fertility preservation outcomes differed by sex assigned at birth. Conclusion: Creation of an oncofertility team produced improvements in fertility counseling and fertility preservation referral across an extended period of time.
Original language | English (US) |
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Journal | Cancer Reports |
DOIs | |
State | Accepted/In press - 2022 |
Keywords
- fertility counseling
- fertility preservation
- oncofertility
- pediatric oncology
- quality improvement
ASJC Scopus subject areas
- Oncology
- Cancer Research