Artificial Reproductive Technology Use and Family-Building Experiences of Female Adult Childhood Cancer Survivors: A Qualitative Study
Simple Summary
Abstract
1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Setting and Study Participants
2.2. Data Collection
2.3. Data Analysis
2.4. Rigor
3. Results
3.1. Confronting Unexpected, Impaired Fertility
“We just went in to see [if I might have troubles conceiving], but all they said was ‘oh, you should just try when you’re ready, but try as early as possible.’” (Diagnosed with leukemia at 3, currently 32; 4+ years trying to conceive.)
“I understood the risks. I stopped having my periods during chemotherapy. […] There was a chance that my periods just wouldn’t come back. So, the fact that they did and were relatively regular was a good sign, but it was more of a we’ll see how long it lasts kind of conversation.” (Diagnosed with lymphoma at 19, currently 39; 1 year trying to conceive.)
“It was a risk that I would hit menopause early. It wasn’t really described what all that meant, if I’m being honest. I thought IVF was going to be an option. That’s the piece I didn’t quite understand. I always kind of assumed that if I had difficulty conceiving or having kids, IVF would be an option, basically that I could throw money at the problem and it would help, but that wasn’t the case. In hindsight, I would have requested some of the hormone tests earlier. That would have probably painted a better picture of at least showing some decline, and I could have known a little sooner or maybe prepared sooner or changed plans or things like that.” (Diagnosed with lymphoma at 19, currently 39; 1 year trying to conceive.)
“I had gone through puberty, so technically, my eggs probably could have been harvested at the time. I don’t know if that was even something that they were doing back then, but I have spoken to other people who had different types of cancer around the same time that I did, like at the same age, and they were able to freeze eggs. So, that just seemed to have been kind of like overlooked for me.” (Diagnosed with a brain/CNS tumor at 14, currently 33; 4+ years trying to conceive.)
“In terms of fertility, I was lucky that it was always talked about in my family, I was well prepared that carrying a child would never be an option for me. And so, with medical advancements, hopefully, by the time I was ready to have a child, surrogacy would be an option. So that’s why at 19 years old, I tried independently to preserve my eggs because I wasn’t sure if I would go through early menopause.” (Diagnosed with rhabdomyosarcoma at 1, currently 34; 4+ years trying to conceive.)
3.2. Grieving Loss and Redefining Identity
“So, they sent me back down to the emergency room and they did an exam and they told me just like right away, like with the ultrasound and everything that, that I had actually lost the baby six weeks previous. I think I spent a good week in bed after that happened. It was a lot of excitement thinking like, ‘oh, this is actually working, I’m actually going to be able to do it and then to just feel like someone ripped the tablecloth out from underneath me,” (Diagnosed with a brain/CNS tumor at 14, currently 33; 4+ years trying to conceive.)
“Surrogacy. Deciding, putting at peace that I was never going to get pregnant. I did every diet, I did every supplement, name it, I tried it, I did it. There’s something peaceful in knowing that I gave 110% and it’s time to move on. Once I accepted that, there was a weight lifted off my shoulders and I could be at peace knowing I did everything. It’s time for me to take the weight off my shoulders and move on to something that isn’t reliant on me,” (Diagnosed with Wilms tumor at 2, currently 31; 4+ years trying to conceive.)
“It took a little bit of my femininity away. […] feeling robbed, or like less of a woman because your inside parts don’t work the way they are supposed to.” (Diagnosed with a brain/CNS tumour at 14, currently 33; 4+ years trying to conceive.)
3.3. Encountering Unsupportive Healthcare
“My water blew up. It’s on me, it’s on her, everyone’s soaked with amniotic fluid, and she looks at us, and like the whole world started spinning. You feel like you’re going to die. And she looks at us and the first thing she says is ‘Oh my gosh. Okay guys don’t worry. You’re so young, you’re going to have another baby.’ And I’ll never forget that moment. And I just looked at her, and I was like, ‘No you don’t understand. It is impossible for us to get pregnant; I need this baby.’ I literally felt like I was going to die. After all that, my whole world ended.” (Diagnosed with Wilms tumor at 2, currently 31; 4+ years trying to conceive.)
“Everyone’s having babies and there’s families and balloons and life’s great. And you’re in a room waiting to deliver your dead baby while there are all these celebrations going on around you. It’s just sick.” (Diagnosed with Wilms tumor at 2, currently 31; 4+ years trying to conceive.)
“The fertility clinic said that we should transfer two embryos, to have a better chance of one of them working. And so, we foolishly listened to that advice, and that was the transfer that worked. But then I became pregnant with triplets. […] So, the fertility clinic said ‘congratulations, this is so good’. And I was like, ‘no, this is actually horrible news’. So, I called [oncologist] and said, ‘what do you actually think of this? Because they’re saying that I should just move ahead and go ahead and try to have triplets.’ And she said ‘that would be absolutely terrible for you with your medical history and your advanced maternal age and all the rest of it. You’d be risking your life and probably end up with no baby.’ … So, it was very difficult to have to go through that.” (Diagnosed with Wilms tumor at 7, currently 40; 4+ years trying to conceive.)
“I think that they give you hope that they’re going to help you figure out a way to somehow get pregnant. But I just don’t know. Not to sound jaded because I’m very lucky that I had good doctors at the fertility clinics, but it also is business for them.” (Diagnosed with rhabdomyosarcoma at 6, currently 41; 1 year trying to conceive.)
3.4. Exploring Alternative Paths: Adoption and International Family-Building
“We’ve been looking in Canada to try and find a surrogate for five years, and we came close last year to finding somebody, and then they changed their mind after six months. We just had no leads, and it’s very competitive in Canada because I think you have a lot of international couples that want to come and do surrogacy. And, because you cannot pay the surrogate mother, not that we could afford to, as another issue, but because there’s not that option, it’s really hard to convince somebody to do that.” (Diagnosed with rhabdomyosarcoma at 1, currently 34; 4+ years trying to conceive.)
3.5. Facing Financial Strain
“I was extremely fortunate that my employer, in [country] had very, very good healthcare and very good health insurance. I worked at an international organization for six years and hated every moment of it, but the reason that I stayed there was because the health insurance was so good, and it was international health insurance. So, it covered 93% of my fertility treatment in BC.” (Diagnosed with rhabdomyosarcoma at 1, currently 34; 4+ years trying to conceive.)
“The woman told me that there was less than 1% chance that I would be able to use the one egg they’d be able to retrieve. And it was $10,000 to do the whole procedure on top of the storage fees. And I asked about compassion medication and cost coverage because I know they do that for women who are going into chemotherapy, and she basically was like ‘Well, that funding is for people going into chemotherapy and for those who can do the retrieval before going through the whole process. There’s nothing available for you.’ I remember I was quite shocked by that, and she just didn’t really seem to care. I ended up not doing anything because $10,000 is a lot of money. It was money that I didn’t have, and it was money that my parents didn’t have.” (Diagnosed with leukemia at 3, currently 25; has not begun trying to conceive.)
4. Discussion
5. Study Limitations
6. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Sociodemographic | n = 15 |
---|---|
Mean Age | 35.6 years |
Marital Status | |
Married/Common Law | 73% |
Single | 20% |
Divorced | 7% |
Living Situation | |
Spouse/Partner | 80% |
Friend/Family/Roommate | 13% |
Alone | 7% |
Place of Residence | |
Large City | 73% |
Small City | 20% |
Rural | 7% |
Education Level | |
Certificate | 20% |
University Degree | 80% |
Employment Status | |
Full time | 73% |
Part time | 20% |
Unemployed | 7% |
Cancer Type | Cancer Treatment | Years TTC | ART Methods Used | # of Children | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Wilms Tumor | Chemotherapy RT Surgery | 4+ | IVF with Donor Oocyte/Embryo; Surrogacy | 3 |
2 | Leukemia (ALL) | Chemotherapy RT BMT | 4+ | IVF with Donor Oocyte/Embryo; IVF with Own Oocyte/Embryo | 0 |
3 | Lymphoma | Chemotherapy | 1 | Consultations | 0 |
4 | Leukemia (AML) | Chemotherapy BMT | <1 | Consultations | 0 |
5 | Ewing’s Sarcoma | Chemotherapy RT Surgery | 4+ | IVF with Donor Oocyte/Embryo | 0 |
6 | Brain/CNS | Chemotherapy RT Surgery | 4+ | IVF with Donor Oocyte/Embryo; IVF with Own Oocyte/Embryo | 1 |
7 | Rhabdomyosarcoma | Chemotherapy RT Surgery | 4+ | IVF with Own Oocyte/Embryo; Surrogacy | 0 |
8 | Wilms Tumor | Chemotherapy RT Surgery | 4+ | IVF with Own Oocyte/Embryo | 2 |
9 | Lymphoma | Chemotherapy Radiation | 2 | IUI with sperm donor | 0 |
10 | Lymphoma | Chemotherapy | <1 | Oocyte Cryopreservation | 0 |
11 | Rhabdomyosarcoma | Chemotherapy RT Surgery | <1 | Consultations | 0 |
12 | Rhabdomyosarcoma | Chemotherapy RT Surgery | 1 | Oocyte retrievals x2 | 1 |
13 | Embryonal Sarcoma | Chemotherapy Surgery | 3 | IVF with Own Oocyte/Embryo | 0 |
14 | Lymphoma | Chemotherapy RT | 4+ | IVF with Own Oocyte/Embryo | 1 |
15 | Ewing’s Sarcoma | Chemotherapy Surgery | <1 | Oocyte Cryopreservation | 0 |
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Banser, S.; Howard, A.F.; Thorne, S.; Goddard, K.J. Artificial Reproductive Technology Use and Family-Building Experiences of Female Adult Childhood Cancer Survivors: A Qualitative Study. Curr. Oncol. 2025, 32, 369. https://doi.org/10.3390/curroncol32070369
Banser S, Howard AF, Thorne S, Goddard KJ. Artificial Reproductive Technology Use and Family-Building Experiences of Female Adult Childhood Cancer Survivors: A Qualitative Study. Current Oncology. 2025; 32(7):369. https://doi.org/10.3390/curroncol32070369
Chicago/Turabian StyleBanser, Selena, A. Fuchsia Howard, Sally Thorne, and Karen J. Goddard. 2025. "Artificial Reproductive Technology Use and Family-Building Experiences of Female Adult Childhood Cancer Survivors: A Qualitative Study" Current Oncology 32, no. 7: 369. https://doi.org/10.3390/curroncol32070369
APA StyleBanser, S., Howard, A. F., Thorne, S., & Goddard, K. J. (2025). Artificial Reproductive Technology Use and Family-Building Experiences of Female Adult Childhood Cancer Survivors: A Qualitative Study. Current Oncology, 32(7), 369. https://doi.org/10.3390/curroncol32070369