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Join this channel to get access to perks: / @fertilityclinicwithdrchudi IVF and Gynecological Cancers (Breast & Uterine Cancers): Setting The Record Straight with Dr. Chudi. SGHS Open Clinic with Dr Chudi On YouTube & Facebook Questions 1. Does IVF Increase Your Chances Of Getting Cancer? 2. Can IVF Cause Cancer? • Previous data have suggested that these fertility drugs may be associated with increased risk for gynecologic cancers, especially, breast, uterine and ovarian cancers. • Previously, some studies, claimed that, women who have been exposed to fertility drugs with IVF seem to have a transient increase in the risk of having breast or uterine cancer diagnosed in the first year after treatment, though the incidence overall is no greater than expected. • It’s a plausible concern, given that fertility treatment exposes women to unnaturally high levels of hormones, including estrogen and progesterone — often repeatedly, and sometimes at an age when those hormones would normally be declining. • Assisted reproduction or IVF may have associations with increasing the chances of cancer amongst women. • As per a study conducted on more than 250,000 women in Britain, the rates of ovarian and breast cancer were higher in women who underwent IVF. • However, in many cases the results were inconsistent. • Based on another research conducted on 25,152 Dutch women, the consequences can be understood more clearly. They are as follows: 1. Amongst a group of 19,146 women who underwent IVF, only 30 experienced invasive ovarian cancer. 2. However, there were not enough statistics to prove that there was a direct relationship with the IVF procedure and cancer. 3. This increase in ovarian cancer was possibly due to the borderline ovarian tumors. These tumors are not malignant but may get aggravated during IVF treatment. • As of now, there is no convincing evidence that IVF causes gynecologic cancers, especially breast cancers. • From countries that have centralized medicine that track medications and diagnoses, such as in Sweden and England, the registries do not show an increase in breast cancer. • We must remember that these are not clinical trials. • But a large new study suggests that women who undergo in-vitro fertilization (IVF) do not put themselves at a higher-than-usual risk of cancer. • The study examined data on all IVF births in Sweden between 1982 and 2006, comparing the rate of cancer in 24,058 women who conceived via IVF with that of nearly 1.4 million Swedish mothers who did not require fertility treatment. • The study found that the risk for any cancer was actually 26% lower in women after they had children through IVF, compared with those who had conceived the old-fashioned way. • Breast cancer risk was reduced 24% and cervical cancer risk 39%, over the eight-year follow-up period. • However, women who underwent IVF started out with higher rates of cancer than those in the general population; • The fact that these women were more likely to have been treated for cancer, which causes infertility, is probably why they sought IVF.