Cancer can affect your ability to make someone pregnant (fertility). Doctors may think you are infertile if you're not able to get your partner pregnant after a year of regular, unprotected sex.
Fertility can be affected by cancer and cancer treatment. For instance, you might be infertile if:
- Your testicles don't make healthy sperm or don't make enough sperm.
- Sperm can't get out of your body because the passage for sperm is damaged or blocked.
- Your body's sex hormones are altered.
- Your reproductive organs are damaged, changed, or removed.
Doctors are still learning how cancer treatments affect male fertility. Infertility after treatment may be short-term. Or it may be permanent. Fertility problems depend on:
- The type of treatment you had.
- The kind of cancer and where it was in your body.
- How long treatment lasted.
- Your age when you had treatment.
- How long it's been since treatment ended.
- Your overall health.
Still, you should not assume that you can't cause a pregnancy after cancer treatment. Talk with your treatment team about birth control choices if you don't want to cause a pregnancy.