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Ovarian function recovery after transplantation of ovarian tissue cryopreserved and stored for long-term
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Journal of Tissue Science and Engineering

ISSN: 2157-7552

Open Access

Ovarian function recovery after transplantation of ovarian tissue cryopreserved and stored for long-term


Joint Event on 9th International Conference and Exhibition on Tissue Engineering and Biobanking & 9th International Conference and Exhibition on Tissue Science and Regenerative Medicine

April 23-24, 2018 Las Vegas, USA

Raffaella Fabbri, Maria Macciocca, Rossella Vicenti, Stefania Rossi, Renato Seracchioli and Roberto Paradisi

University of Bologna, Italy

Posters & Accepted Abstracts: J Tissue Sci Eng

Abstract :

Statement of the Problem: Ovarian tissue cryopreservation represents a valid strategy to preserve ovarian function in cancer patients with a high risk of premature ovarian failure due to chemo/radiotherapy. The ovarian tissue remains frozen for very long period of time (the request of tissue replanting usually occurs after at least five years from the end of therapies and this period may dragging on further in the case of diseases that require prolonged treatments or in the case of pediatric patients). The purpose of this study was to evaluate the morphology and functional activity of cryopreserved ovarian tissue stored for 18 years after thawing and transplantation. Methodology & Theoretical Orientation: Ovarian tissue of a 29-year-old patient suffering from Hodgkin Lymphoma was cryopreserved at our center before starting anticancer treatment. Eighteen years after storage her ovarian tissue was evaluated by light microscopy, transmission electron microscopy, TUNEL assay and LIVE/DEAD viability/cytotoxicity test and then heterotopically transplanted in two subcutaneous pockets of patient. Follicle development was evaluated by ultrasound examination on the graft sites. Findings: Ovarian tissue showed a good morphology, no apoptosis signs, sub-cellular integrity of follicles and interstitial oedema foci. The LIVE/DEAD assay performed on stromal cells, isolated from cryopreserved tissue, showed viable cells (>97%) after two and seven days of culture. The patient had the first menstruation five months after transplantation and, to date (20 months from the graft), she is regularly menstruating every 30�40 days. Follicular development is monthly evidenced by a bulge palpable beneath the skin in the graft sites. Conclusion & Significance: This study provides evidence that the storage time does not impact on tissue quality and on tissue ability to resume the ovarian function after replanting. These results give hope especially to cancer girls, whose tissues could remain cryopreserved for a very long time. raffaella.fabbri@unibo.it

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