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Use of Simvastatin, Fibrin Clots, and Their Combination to Improve Human Ovarian Tissue Grafting for Fertility Restoration After Anti-Cancer Therapy

Anticancer treatments, particularly chemotherapy, induce ovarian damage and loss of ovarian follicles. There are limited options for fertility restoration, one of which is pre-chemotherapy cryopreservation of ovarian tissue. Transplantation of frozen-thawed human ovarian tissue from cancer survivors...

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Autores principales: Magen, Roei, Shufaro, Yoel, Daykan, Yair, Oron, Galia, Tararashkina, Elena, Levenberg, Shulamit, Anuka, Eli, Ben-Haroush, Avi, Fisch, Benjamin, Abir, Ronit
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7862713/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33552971
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fonc.2020.598026
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author Magen, Roei
Shufaro, Yoel
Daykan, Yair
Oron, Galia
Tararashkina, Elena
Levenberg, Shulamit
Anuka, Eli
Ben-Haroush, Avi
Fisch, Benjamin
Abir, Ronit
author_facet Magen, Roei
Shufaro, Yoel
Daykan, Yair
Oron, Galia
Tararashkina, Elena
Levenberg, Shulamit
Anuka, Eli
Ben-Haroush, Avi
Fisch, Benjamin
Abir, Ronit
author_sort Magen, Roei
collection PubMed
description Anticancer treatments, particularly chemotherapy, induce ovarian damage and loss of ovarian follicles. There are limited options for fertility restoration, one of which is pre-chemotherapy cryopreservation of ovarian tissue. Transplantation of frozen-thawed human ovarian tissue from cancer survivors has resulted in live-births. There is extensive follicular loss immediately after grafting, probably due to too slow graft revascularization. To avoid this problem, it is important to develop methods to improve ovarian tissue neovascularization. The study’s purpose was to investigate if treatment of murine hosts with simvastatin or/and embedding human ovarian tissue within fibrin clots can improve human ovarian tissue grafting (simvastatin and fibrin clots promote vascularization). There was a significantly higher number of follicles in group A (ungrafted control) than in group B (untreated tissue). Group C (simvastatin-treated hosts) had the highest levels of follicle atresia. Group C had significantly more proliferating follicles (Ki67-stained) than groups B and E (simvastatin-treated hosts and tissue embedded within fibrin clots), group D (tissue embedded within fibrin clots) had significantly more proliferating follicles (Ki67-stained) than group B. On immunofluorescence study, only groups D and E showed vascular structures that expressed both human and murine markers (mouse-specific platelet endothelial cell adhesion molecule, PECAM, and human-specific von Willebrand factor, vWF). Peripheral human vWF expression was significantly higher in group E than group B. Diffuse human vWF expression was significantly higher in groups A and E than groups B and C. When grafts were not embedded in fibrin, there was a significant loss of human vWF expression compared to groups A and E. This protocol may be tested to improve ovarian implantation in cancer survivors.
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spelling pubmed-78627132021-02-06 Use of Simvastatin, Fibrin Clots, and Their Combination to Improve Human Ovarian Tissue Grafting for Fertility Restoration After Anti-Cancer Therapy Magen, Roei Shufaro, Yoel Daykan, Yair Oron, Galia Tararashkina, Elena Levenberg, Shulamit Anuka, Eli Ben-Haroush, Avi Fisch, Benjamin Abir, Ronit Front Oncol Oncology Anticancer treatments, particularly chemotherapy, induce ovarian damage and loss of ovarian follicles. There are limited options for fertility restoration, one of which is pre-chemotherapy cryopreservation of ovarian tissue. Transplantation of frozen-thawed human ovarian tissue from cancer survivors has resulted in live-births. There is extensive follicular loss immediately after grafting, probably due to too slow graft revascularization. To avoid this problem, it is important to develop methods to improve ovarian tissue neovascularization. The study’s purpose was to investigate if treatment of murine hosts with simvastatin or/and embedding human ovarian tissue within fibrin clots can improve human ovarian tissue grafting (simvastatin and fibrin clots promote vascularization). There was a significantly higher number of follicles in group A (ungrafted control) than in group B (untreated tissue). Group C (simvastatin-treated hosts) had the highest levels of follicle atresia. Group C had significantly more proliferating follicles (Ki67-stained) than groups B and E (simvastatin-treated hosts and tissue embedded within fibrin clots), group D (tissue embedded within fibrin clots) had significantly more proliferating follicles (Ki67-stained) than group B. On immunofluorescence study, only groups D and E showed vascular structures that expressed both human and murine markers (mouse-specific platelet endothelial cell adhesion molecule, PECAM, and human-specific von Willebrand factor, vWF). Peripheral human vWF expression was significantly higher in group E than group B. Diffuse human vWF expression was significantly higher in groups A and E than groups B and C. When grafts were not embedded in fibrin, there was a significant loss of human vWF expression compared to groups A and E. This protocol may be tested to improve ovarian implantation in cancer survivors. Frontiers Media S.A. 2021-01-22 /pmc/articles/PMC7862713/ /pubmed/33552971 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fonc.2020.598026 Text en Copyright © 2021 Magen, Shufaro, Daykan, Oron, Tararashkina, Levenberg, Anuka, Ben-Haroush, Fisch and Abir http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Oncology
Magen, Roei
Shufaro, Yoel
Daykan, Yair
Oron, Galia
Tararashkina, Elena
Levenberg, Shulamit
Anuka, Eli
Ben-Haroush, Avi
Fisch, Benjamin
Abir, Ronit
Use of Simvastatin, Fibrin Clots, and Their Combination to Improve Human Ovarian Tissue Grafting for Fertility Restoration After Anti-Cancer Therapy
title Use of Simvastatin, Fibrin Clots, and Their Combination to Improve Human Ovarian Tissue Grafting for Fertility Restoration After Anti-Cancer Therapy
title_full Use of Simvastatin, Fibrin Clots, and Their Combination to Improve Human Ovarian Tissue Grafting for Fertility Restoration After Anti-Cancer Therapy
title_fullStr Use of Simvastatin, Fibrin Clots, and Their Combination to Improve Human Ovarian Tissue Grafting for Fertility Restoration After Anti-Cancer Therapy
title_full_unstemmed Use of Simvastatin, Fibrin Clots, and Their Combination to Improve Human Ovarian Tissue Grafting for Fertility Restoration After Anti-Cancer Therapy
title_short Use of Simvastatin, Fibrin Clots, and Their Combination to Improve Human Ovarian Tissue Grafting for Fertility Restoration After Anti-Cancer Therapy
title_sort use of simvastatin, fibrin clots, and their combination to improve human ovarian tissue grafting for fertility restoration after anti-cancer therapy
topic Oncology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7862713/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33552971
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fonc.2020.598026
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