Abstract
Fertility preservation (FP) has become an essential dimension of modern medicine, reflecting the paradigm shift from survival alone to survivorship. Once confined to oncology, FP now spans a broad spectrum of medical, social, and technological contexts. Surgical innovations, including fertility-sparing surgery and ovarian transposition, allow reproductive potential to be safeguarded without compromising oncological safety. Cryobiology has been transformed by the transition from slow-freezing to vitrification, establishing oocyte and embryo cryopreservation as gold-standard approaches with outcomes comparable to fresh cycles. Alongside onco-fertility, "social freezing" has emerged as a tool of reproductive autonomy, though it raises counselling and ethical challenges related to age, expectations, and equity of access. Resilience in FP also requires psychosocial support: while emotional distress is common, evidence shows that interventions such as mindfulness and structured counselling improve mental health even if conception outcomes remain unchanged. In parallel, ovarian tissue cryopreservation for patients unable to undergo stimulation and immature testicular tissue banking extend possibilities, with early clinical successes highlighting future translational pathways. Uterus transplantation has emerged as the first-line treatment of congenital absence of a uterus and can restore fertility after a hysterectomy performed for cervical cancer. Looking ahead, regenerative approaches, including stem-cell-based strategies, 3D bio-printing of genital tissues, tissue engineering, and artificial uterus systems, signal the next frontier, while underscoring the need for further research as well as robust ethical, legal, and safety frameworks. FP thus represents a multidisciplinary and rapidly evolving field that integrates oncology, reproductive medicine, gynaecology, transplantation surgery, psychology, and laboratory disciplines. Its trajectory is defined by both technological innovation and the imperative to align medical progress with patient autonomy, equity, and long-term quality of life.