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Item Fertility Preservation in Pediatric Leukemia and Lymphoma: A Report from the Children’s Oncology Group(Wiley, 2023) Close, Allison; Burns, Karen; Bjornard, Kari; Webb, Martine; Chavez, Josuah; Chow, Eric J.; Meacham, Lillian; Pediatrics, School of MedicineCertain chemotherapy agents, radiation, and surgery can all negatively impact future fertility. Consults regarding treatment-related risk for infertility and gonadal late effects of these agents should occur at the time of diagnosis as well as during survivorship. Counseling on fertility risk has traditionally varied significantly across providers and institutions. We aim to provide a guide to standardize the assignment of gonadotoxic risk, which can be used in counseling patients both at the time of diagnosis and in survivorship. Gonadotoxic therapies were abstracted from 26 frontline Children's Oncology Group (COG) phase III protocols for leukemia/lymphoma, in use from 2000-2022. A stratification system based on gonadotoxic therapies, sex, and pubertal status was used to assign treatments into minimal, significant, and high level of increased risk for gonadal dysfunction/infertility. Risk levels were assigned to protocols and different treatment arms to aid oncologists and survivor care providers in counseling patients regarding treatment-related gonadotoxicity. Males were most commonly at high risk, with at least one high-risk arm in 14/26 protocols (54%), followed by pubertal females (23% of protocols) and prepubertal females (15% of protocols). All patients who received direct gonadal radiation or hematopoietic stem cell transplant (HSCT) were considered at high risk. Partnering with patients and their oncology/survivorship team is imperative for effective fertility counseling both prior to and post treatment, and this comprehensive guide can be used as a tool to standardize and improve reproductive health counseling in patients undergoing COG-based leukemia/lymphoma care.Item The National Physicians Cooperative: transforming fertility management in the cancer setting and beyond.(Future Medicine, 2018-12) Smith, Brigid M.; Duncan, Francesca E.; Ataman, Lauren; Smith, Kristin; Quinn, Gwendolyn P.; Chang, R. Jeffrey; Finlayson, Courtney; Orwig, Kyle; Valli-Pulaski, Hanna; Moravek, Molly B.; Zelinski, Mary B.; Irene Su, H.; Vitek, Wendy; Smith, James F.; Jeruss, Jacqueline S.; Gracia, Clarisa; Coutifaris, Christos; Shah, Divya; Nahata, Leena; Gomez-Lobo, Veronica; Appiah, Leslie Coker; Brannigan, Robert E.; Gillis, Valerie; Gradishar, William; Javed, Asma; Rhoton-Vlasak, Alice S.; Kondapalli, Laxmi A.; Neuber, Evelyn; Ginsberg, Jill P.; Muller, Charles H.; Hirshfeld-Cytron, Jennifer; Kutteh, William H.; Lindheim, Steven R.; Cherven, Brooke; Meacham, Lillian R.; Rao, Pooja; Torno, Lilibeth; Sender, Leonard S.; Vadaparampil, Susan T.; Skiles, Jodi L.; Schafer-Kalkhoff, Tara; Frias, Oliva J.; Byrne, Julia; Westphal, Lynn M.; Schust, Danny J.; Klosky, James L.; McCracken, Kate A.; Ting, Alison; Khan, Zaraq; Granberg, Candace; Lockart, Barbara; Scoccia, Bert; Laronda, Monica M.; Mersereau, Jennifer E.; Marsh, Courtney; Pavone, Mary Ellen; Woodruff, Teresa K.; Pediatrics, School of MedicineOnce unimaginable, fertility management is now a nationally established part of cancer care in institutions, from academic centers to community hospitals to private practices. Over the last two decades, advances in medicine and reproductive science have made it possible for men, women and children to be connected with an oncofertility specialist or offered fertility preservation soon after a cancer diagnosis. The Oncofertility Consortium's National Physicians Cooperative is a large-scale effort to engage physicians across disciplines - oncology, urology, obstetrics and gynecology, reproductive endocrinology, and behavioral health - in clinical and research activities to enable significant progress in providing fertility preservation options to children and adults. Here, we review the structure and function of the National Physicians Cooperative and identify next steps.Item A View from the past into our collective future: the oncofertility consortium vision statement(Springer, 2021-01) Woodruff, Teresa K.; Ataman-Millhouse, Lauren; Acharya, Kelly S.; Almeida-Santos, Teresa; Anazodo, Antoinette; Anderson, Richard A.; Appiah, Leslie; Bader, Joy; Becktell, Kerri; Brannigan, Robert E.; Breech, Lesley; Bourlon, Maria T.; Bumbuliene, Žana; Burns, Karen; Campo-Engelstein, Lisa; Campos, Jacira R.; Centola, Grace M.; Chehin, Mauricio Barbour; Chen, Diane; De Vos, Michel; Duncan, Francesca E.; El-Damen, Ahmed; Fair, Douglas; Famuyiwa, Yemi; Fechner, Patricia Y.; Fontoura, Paula; Frias, Olivia; Gerkowicz, Sabrina A.; Ginsberg, Jill; Gracia, Clarisa R.; Goldman, Kara; Gomez-Lobo, Veronica; Hazelrigg, Brent; Hsieh, Michael H.; Hoyos, Luis R.; Hoyos-Martinez, Alfonso; Jach, Robert; Jassem, Jacek; Javed, Murid; Jayasinghe, Yasmin; Jeelani, Roohi; Jeruss, Jacqueline S.; Kaul-Mahajan, Nalini; Keim-Malpass, Jessica; Ketterl, Tyler G.; Khrouf, Mohamed; Kimelman, Dana; Kusuhara, Atsuko; Kutteh, William H.; Laronda, Monica M.; Lee, Jung Ryeol; Lehmann, Vicky; Letourneau, Joseph M.; McGinnis, Lynda K.; McMahon, Eileen; Meacham, Lillian R.; Velez Mijangos, Monserrat Fabiola; Moravek, Molly; Nahata, Leena; Ogweno, George Moses; Orwig, Kyle E.; Pavone, Mary Ellen; Peccatori, Fedro Alessandro; Pesce, Romina Ileana; Pulaski, Hanna; Quinn, Gwendolyn; Quintana, Ramiro; Quintana, Tomas; de Carvalho, Bruno Ramalho; Ramsey-Goldman, Rosalind; Reinecke, Joyce; Reis, Fernando M.; Rios, Julie; Rhoton-Vlasak, Alice S.; Rodriguez-Wallberg, Kenny A.; Roeca, Cassandra; Rotz, Seth J.; Rowell, Erin; Salama, Mahmoud; Saraf, Amanda J.; Scarella, Anibal; Schafer-Kalkhoff, Tara; Schmidt, Deb; Senapati, Suneeta; Shah, Divya; Shikanov, Ariella; Shnorhavorian, Margarett; Skiles, Jodi L.; Smith, James F.; Smith, Kristin; Sobral, Fabio; Stimpert, Kyle; Su, H. Irene; Sugimoto, Kouhei; Suzuki, Nao; Thakur, Mili; Victorson, David; Viale, Luz; Vitek, Wendy; Wallace, W. Hamish; Wartella, Ellen A.; Westphal, Lynn M.; Whiteside, Stacy; Wilcox, Lea H.; Wyns, Christine; Xiao, Shuo; Xu, Jing; Zelinski, Mary; Pediatrics, School of MedicinePurpose: Today, male and female adult and pediatric cancer patients, individuals transitioning between gender identities, and other individuals facing health extending but fertility limiting treatments can look forward to a fertile future. This is, in part, due to the work of members associated with the Oncofertility Consortium. Methods: The Oncofertility Consortium is an international, interdisciplinary initiative originally designed to explore the urgent unmet need associated with the reproductive future of cancer survivors. As the strategies for fertility management were invented, developed or applied, the individuals for who the program offered hope, similarly expanded. As a community of practice, Consortium participants share information in an open and rapid manner to addresses the complex health care and quality-of-life issues of cancer, transgender and other patients. To ensure that the organization remains contemporary to the needs of the community, the field designed a fully inclusive mechanism for strategic planning and here present the findings of this process. Results: This interprofessional network of medical specialists, scientists, and scholars in the law, medical ethics, religious studies and other disciplines associated with human interventions, explore the relationships between health, disease, survivorship, treatment, gender and reproductive longevity. Conclusion: The goals are to continually integrate the best science in the service of the needs of patients and build a community of care that is ready for the challenges of the field in the future.