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Journal of
eISSN: 2373-633X

Cancer Prevention & Current Research

Proceeding Volume 7 Issue 5

Pregnancy and breastfeeding after treated breast cancer: inquest to health professionals in agadir

Smail Chadli,1,2 Naima Taqarort,3 Said Oulkheir1

1Higher Institute of Nursing Professions and Health Techniques, Morocco
2Laboratory of Cellular Biology and Molecular Genetics, Ibn Zohr University, Morocco
3Polydisciplinary faculty of Taroudant, Ibn Zohr University, Morocco

Correspondence: Smail CHADLI, Higher Institute of Nursing Professions and Health Techniques, ISPITS- Agadir, Morocco,, Tel 212 663 112 099, Fax 212 528 843 987

Received: February 10, 2017 | Published: March 3, 2017

Citation: Chadli S, Taqarort N, Oulkheir S. Pregnancy and breastfeeding after treated breast cancer: inquest to health professionals in agadir. J Cancer Prev Curr Res. 2017;7(5):144. DOI: 10.15406/jcpcr.2017.07.00247

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Keywords

pregnancy, breastfeeding, treated breast cancer, prognosis, knowledge

Objective and Aims

In Morocco, breast cancer is the first cancer in women and its incidence is progressively increasing in young patients. Furthermore, the declines in age of first pregnancy generate, probably in future years a growing number of breast cancer cases in premenopausal women before completing their maternity project. The health professionals will find themselves increasingly faced with a situation of planning the pregnancy in a young patient with a breast cancer history. The objective of our study is to examine the health professionals’ knowing on pregnancy and the practice of breastfeeding after treated breast cancer.

Result

Forty questionnaires were completed by health professionals exercising at Agadir hospital. The analysis of this questionnaires showed that 60% of professionals interviewed have met women having pregnant after breast cancer treatment. Nonetheless, 67% do not have clear information on the subject and the possibility of pregnancy and lactation after breast cancer and their potential risks. Some physio-pathological, psychological, cultural and social factors may influence the initiation of a pregnancy and breastfeeding in a woman of reproductive age who has been treated for breast cancer. Moreover, several women do not contemplate a pregnancy after a breast cancer and this is due to repeatedly non-justified reasons coming from their health professionals.

Conclusion

Due to the development of new therapeutic treatments in recent years, a pregnancy can be planned for the young women after breast cancer. No data report the deleterious effect of pregnancy on breast cancer prognosis, neither an additional risk of malformation in pregnancy after treatment for breast cancer. However, it is recommended to respect a caution period. It is suggested a delay within two to three years for patients with a good prognosis cancer and a delay of five years for patients with a bad prognosis in breast cancer. For the breastfeeding impact after breast cancer, nowadays, there is no evidence on the risk of a second breast cancer or risk of recurrence in the conserved breast. The health professionals has role to provide answers to the questions that may be encountered in this type of highly difficult situation. They must have clear information about post-chemotherapy premature ovarian failure, fertility preservation opportunities and the optimal time between cancer and future pregnancy or the consequences of this disease on the pregnancy course and breastfeeding chances and its prognostic impact.

Creative Commons Attribution License

©2017 Chadli, et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and build upon your work non-commercially.