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Fertility in the Shadow of Cancer: Experiences of Reproductive Loss Among Women with Gynecological Cancers in Ghana

Afaya, A.; Amenah, D. B.; Chambas, F.; Aidoo, P.; Gideon, O. A.; Vidzor, M.; Aidoo, B.; Afaya, R. A.; Avane, M. A.; Daniels-Donkor, S. S.; Daliri, D. B.; Salia, S. M.

2026-02-28 oncology
10.64898/2026.02.21.26346234 medRxiv
Show abstract

BackgroundGynecological cancers and their treatments can compromise fertility, with profound psychosocial consequences for women of reproductive age. Yet, womens lived experiences of cancer-related infertility remain underexplored in low-resource settings, including Ghana. This study examined the impact of gynecological cancers on fertility among reproductive-aged women receiving care at Ho Teaching Hospital, Ghana. MethodsA qualitative descriptive design was used. Fourteen women aged 15-49 years with gynecological cancers who had completed or were undergoing treatment were purposively recruited until saturation. Semi-structured interviews (30-45 minutes) were conducted face-to-face or by telephone in English, Twi, or Ewe, audio-recorded, transcribed verbatim, and analyzed using thematic analysis. Strategies to enhance rigor included independent coding, member checking, reflexivity, and peer debriefing. ResultsFive themes and eighteen subthemes emerged. Participants described infertility as a threat to womanhood and future life plans, expressed as a sense of incompleteness, fear of rejection, denial, and shattered aspirations. Social consequences included stigma and impaired intimate relationships. Treatment-related burdens, menstrual changes, pain, fatigue, and anxiety compounded distress. Economic hardship and educational disruption were common. Women also demonstrated resilience through adherence to treatment, dietary and lifestyle modifications, faith-based coping, and family support. ConclusionGynecological cancer-related infertility is a multidimensional survivorship burden. Integrating fertility counseling, psychosocial support, symptom management, and financial/social protection into cancer care is critical in Ghanaian settings.

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