Perceptions of participating in family-centered fertility research among adolescent and young adult males newly diagnosed with cancer: A qualitative study

Leena Nahata, Taylor L Morgan, Keagan G Lipak, Olivia E Clark, Nicholas D Yeager, Sarah H O'Brien, Stacy Whiteside, Anthony Audino, Gwendolyn P Quinn, Cynthia A Gerhardt, Leena Nahata, Taylor L Morgan, Keagan G Lipak, Olivia E Clark, Nicholas D Yeager, Sarah H O'Brien, Stacy Whiteside, Anthony Audino, Gwendolyn P Quinn, Cynthia A Gerhardt

Abstract

Background: Over half of male childhood cancer survivors experience infertility after treatment, which is known to cause distress and impact future quality of life. Sperm banking rates remain low, and little is known about how adolescent and young adult (AYA) males and their families make fertility preservation (FP) decisions. This study examined AYA and parent perceptions of participating in a research study focused on testing a new FP decision tool at the time of cancer diagnosis.

Methods: Forty-four participants (19 mothers, 11 fathers, 14 male AYAs 12-25 years old) from 20 families completed brief assessments at diagnosis and approximately one month later, including a qualitative interview exploring the impact of study participation. Verbatim transcripts were coded through thematic content analysis using the constant comparison method.

Results: Two major themes emerged: (1) a positive effect of participating in the study and (2) a neutral effect (no positive/negative effect of participation). Subthemes that emerged for participants who noted a positive effect included (a) participation prompted deeper thinking, (b) participation influenced family conversations, and (c) participation resulted in altruism/helping others. No participant reported a negative effect.

Conclusions: This study demonstrates that participation in family-centered research focused on FP among AYA males, before treatment begins, is perceived as beneficial or neutral at the time of a new cancer diagnosis. These findings provide support for future family-centered FP interventions for this population.

Keywords: adolescents and young adult males; cancer; fertility.

Conflict of interest statement

Conflict of Interest: None

© 2019 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

Source: PubMed

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