Volume 28, Issue 4 e13036
REVIEW

Women's fertility decision-making with a diagnosis of breast cancer: A qualitative evidence synthesis

Sharon Linnane MHSc, PGD

Sharon Linnane MHSc, PGD

Public Health Nurse

Public Health Nurse, Mervue Health Centre, Galway, Ireland

Search for more papers by this author
Aoife Quinn MSc

Aoife Quinn MSc

Clinical Nurse Specialist (Oncology)

Clinical Nurse Specialist (Oncology), Galway University Hospitals, Galway, Ireland

Search for more papers by this author
Anne Riordan BA

Anne Riordan BA

Librarian

National Health Library and Knowledge Service, Merlin Park University Hospital, Galway, Ireland

Search for more papers by this author
Maura Dowling PhD, MSc, BNS

Corresponding Author

Maura Dowling PhD, MSc, BNS

Senior Lecturer

School of Nursing and Midwifery, National University of Ireland, Galway, Ireland

Correspondence

Maura Dowling, PhD, MSc, BNS, Senior Lecturer, School of Nursing and Midwifery, National University of Ireland, Galway, University Road, Galway, Ireland.

Email: [email protected]

Search for more papers by this author
First published: 27 January 2022
Citations: 1

Abstract

Aim

To synthesize qualitative evidence of premenopausal women's experiences of fertility decision-making with a diagnosis of breast cancer.

Background

Breast cancer is increasingly more common in premenopausal women who may have not yet considered starting a family or have completed their families.

Design

Qualitative evidence synthesis guided by Thomas and Harden's three-stage approach to thematic analysis.

Data Sources

Twelve electronic databases were searched: CINAHL, Embase, Pubmed, Proquest, PsychINFO, Lenus, Scopus, Web of Science, Rian.ie, Medline, EThOS e-theses online and DART Europe. No year limit was set.

Review Methods

The ‘Enhancing transparency in reporting the synthesis of qualitative research guidelines’ (ENTREQ) statement was followed.

Results

Fifteen qualitative studies were included in the synthesis. Seven review findings under four major themes were identified: (1) first comes survival, (2) making decisions ‘under the gun’, (3) health-care professionals should not make assumptions and (4) we want accurate, detailed information and we want it early. High confidence in six of the review findings was agreed.

Conclusion

Most women experienced rushed fertility preservation decision-making at a time when they also faced cancer treatment decisions. Women want detailed, clear information on fertility preservation early after their diagnosis.

Summary statement

What is already known about this topic?

  • Many premenopausal women with newly diagnosed breast cancer express their concerns about fertility.
  • Many premenopausal women feel forced into making rapid decisions regarding fertility interventions.

What this paper adds?

  • After a diagnosis of breast cancer, premenopausal women's fear of a recurrence and desire to survive for their existing children can dominate their fertility decision-making.
  • Premenopausal women can feel forced into rapid decision-making on fertility intervention at the same time as cancer treatment decisions and often in the context of health-care professionals' assumptions on what they think a woman wants.
  • Premenopausal women with breast cancer want more information, preferably from fertility experts, and they want it early after their cancer diagnosis.

The implications of this paper:

  • Health-care professionals should reflect on any assumptions they may have about a woman's fertility and reproductive choices in the context of a cancer diagnosis and set these aside in any discussions with women.
  • Health-care professionals should focus on consistency in fertility information provision to all premenopausal women facing treatment for breast cancer.

CONFLICT OF INTEREST

None.

DATA AVAILABILITY STATEMENT

Data sharing is not applicable to this article as no new data were created or analyzed in this study.

The full text of this article hosted at iucr.org is unavailable due to technical difficulties.