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iii
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Foreword
24 January 2012
Women in Western societies are progressively delaying child bearing until their mid- to late- thirties, thereby increasing the possibility of developing a gynaecological malignancy before completing t...
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Neville F. Hacker
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291-292
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Cervical cancer
20 January 2012
Standard treatment for invasive cervical cancer involves either radical surgery or radiotherapy. Childbearing is therefore impossible after either of these treatments. A fertility-sparing option, howe...
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John H. Shepherd
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293-309
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Endometrial cancer
24 January 2012
Endometrial carcinoma is the most common gynaecological malignancy in the Western world. The standard management of endometrial carcinoma is total hysterectomy and bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy with...
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Vivek Arora,
Michael A. Quinn
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311-324
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Borderline ovarian tumours
24 January 2012
Borderline ovarian tumours account for 10–20% of all epithelial ovarian cancer. Historically, standard primary surgery has included borderline ovarian tumours, omentectomy, peritoneal washing and mult...
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Claes Göran Tropé,
Janne Kaern,
Ben Davidson
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325-336
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Epithelial ovarian cancer
20 January 2012
The incidence of epithelial ovarian cancer in women aged 40 years and younger is 3–17%. The management of these women is challenging and requires balancing the need to treat epithelial ovarian cancer ...
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Joseph S. Ng,
Jeffrey J.H. Low,
A. Ilancheran
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337-345
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Malignant ovarian germ-cell tumours
24 January 2012
Malignant ovarian germ-cell tumours account for about 5% of all ovarian malignancies and typically present in the teenage years. They are almost always unilateral and are exquisitely chemosensitive. A...
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Jeffrey J.H. Low,
Arunachalam Ilancheran,
Joseph S. Ng
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347-355
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Gestational trophoblastic disease
24 January 2012
Most women with gestational trophoblastic disease are of reproductive age. Because the disease is readily treatable with favourable prognosis, fertility becomes an important issue. Hydatidiform mole i...
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K.Y. Tse,
Hextan Y.S. Ngan
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357-370
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Gynaecological cancer in pregnancy
25 January 2012
Cancer in pregnancy, fortunately, is uncommon. This is even more so for gynaecological cancer. Fertility preservation in gynaecological cancer is already a difficult issue, as the common gynaecologica...
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Arunachalam Ilancheran,
Jeffrey Low,
Joseph S. Ng
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371-377
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Chemotherapy and fertility
20 January 2012
The overall increase in cancer prevalence and the significant increase in long-term survival have generated worldwide interest in preserving fertility in young women exposed to gonadotoxic chemo- and ...
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Zeev Blumenfeld
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379-390
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Recent advances in oocyte and ovarian tissue cryopreservation and transplantation
24 January 2012
Options for preserving fertility in women include well-established methods such as fertility-sparing surgery, shielding to reduce radiation damage to reproductive organs, and emergency in-vitro fertil...
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Kenny A. Rodriguez-Wallberg,
Kutluk Oktay
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391-405
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Fertility-preserving surgical procedures, techniques
13 February 2012
As a result of the trend toward late childbearing, fertility preservation has become a major issue in young women with gynaecological cancer. Fertility-sparing treatments have been successfully attemp...
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Alejandra Martinez,
Mathieu Poilblanc,
Gwenael Ferron,
Mariolene De Cuypere,
Eva Jouve,
Denis Querleu
et al.
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407-424
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| Frontmatter |
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Fertility Preservation in Gynaecological Cancer – Multiple Choice Questions for Vol. 26, No. 3
03 April 2012
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A1-A6
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Screening for Gynaecological Cancers – Answers to Multiple Choice Questions for Vol. 26, No. 2
13 February 2012
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A7-A12
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