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About Egg Freezing
Extend Fertility takes great pride in helping to empower women to feel more in control of their bodies and lives with
top line information on egg freezing and female fertility. Read what our egg freezing clients are saying about freezing their eggs and working with Extend Fertility.
The ability to postpone motherhood through egg freezing was made possible by the discovery that the age of a woman's eggs is more important than her biological age. In the last two decades, even post-menopausal women have become pregnant and delivered babies by using donor eggs from much younger women. Those developments created the incentive to preserve a woman's own eggs by egg freezing while the women are still young. Female fertility peaks at age 27 and by age 40, the chance of getting pregnant is less than 10%. Egg freezing and
egg harvesting enable women to break free from the stressful drumbeat of their biological clock.
Eventually, egg freezing is expected to have an effect on egg donation by allowing one donor to store eggs that could be used by several recipients. Still, perhaps the most compelling current use of egg freezing is to benefit women with diseases that could interfere with fertility.
How egg freezing works
- Extract eggs Woman receives drugs to produce multiple eggs. Ultrasound-guided needles
are used to harvest eggs from the ovary.
- Identify The eggs, which are in fluid when extracted, are poured onto a flat dish. Individual eggs are identified with a microscope and withdrawn for freezing.
- Prepare for egg freezing Because ice crystals can form within the eggs and damage them, technicians remove the water from the eggs and bathe them in an 'antifreeze' solution before egg freezing. Laboratories vary in how they conduct the egg freezing process and freeze the female eggs. Some prefer a slow egg freezing technique, while others use a flash egg freezing process called vitrification.
- Freeze Eggs are stored in tubes in a liquid nitrogen storage tank.
- Thaw and fertilize each egg, is then thawed and injected with a needle containing a single sperm--a procedure called ICSI. Eggs begin to develop into embryos.
- Implant Embryos are implanted into the uterus using a catheter.
Extend Fertility is a company created
and run by women dedicated to providing women with a safe and effective
egg freezing fertility preservation solution. As professional women
in our 20’s & 30’s, we are keenly aware of the increased opportunities
available to today’s women, and the conflict that human
egg freezing and these fertility opportunities can create with the
reality of
female fertility and the
biological clock. By developing a medical solution to this problem
and effectively extending a woman’s fertility, we are proud to provide
proactive women with more reproductive options than ever before
including human
egg freezing.
Our team is comprised of world-renowned doctors, scientists, and
business leaders. We are the only company that solely specializes in
egg freezing. As such, we pride ourselves on our superior client
services and an unmatched depth of knowledge and experience in
egg freezing.
Welcome to Extend Fertility -
www.extendfertility.com
This extend fertility website helps consumers learn more about Human
Egg Freezing. We have posted our FAQ's and further human
egg freezing information below:
What is a woman’s natural
biological clock?
When it comes to issues of fertility, it is the age of the egg, not the
age of the woman that matters most. Women are born with a finite number
of eggs, around 1 million. At puberty, that number has dwindled to
400,000 and subsequently an average of 750 eggs are lost each month. The
eggs not only begin to diminish in quantity, but also in quality. The
combination of these factors leads to a woman’s fertility beginning to
decline in her 20’s and significantly deteriorating after age 35.
According to the American Society for Reproductive Medicine (ASRM), a
woman over age 40 has only a 5 percent chance or less of becoming
pregnant naturally in any one month. Furthermore, the risk of
chromosomal abnormalities in newborns increases with the age of the
woman's egg, growing to 1 in 66 at age 40 versus 1 in 385 at age 30.
Research has found that when women use donor eggs from younger women,
they can achieve the same pregnancy success rates as women in their
20's. Extend Fertility’s
egg freezing service provides a way for those younger "donor" eggs
to be the mother's own eggs that were retrieved at a younger age and
preserved at that age using cryopreservation technology.
Does egg-harvesting jeopardize natural fertility by removing “good
eggs”?
While a woman ovulates one egg each month, there are actually multiple
eggs that are absorbed in the process of selecting this egg for
ovulation. When eggs are retrieved, the eggs that a woman would normally
lose that month are simply "rescued." This means that there should be no
adverse effect on future fertility from egg-retrieval. Women that
undergo egg-retrieval should see no difference in the number of cycles
they would normally have over their lifetime, and will enter menopause
at the same time they would have without an egg-retrieval. Furthermore,
the quality of their remaining eggs will not be compromised by the
egg-retrieval.
Who is a good candidate for
egg freezing?
Click here to learn who is a good
egg freezing candidate
Where is Extend Fertility located? What if I don’t live near a center?
Click here to find a partner center near you. Extend Fertility
understands that our clients may not live near one of our partner
centers. To minimize inconvenience, the majority of our treatment
process can be done from any location, with travel to an Extend
Fertility partner center for only the egg collection.
How much does it cost to freeze eggs?
Extend Fertility’s fees can be as low as $200 per month. Clients should
be prepared to spend $9,000-$13,000 for one
egg freezing treatment cycle which includes standard medical,
science and service fees, egg transportation and the first year of
storage. Subsequent treatments are priced between $5,000-$9,000.
In addition to these fees, clients should expect to pay $2,500-$4,000
per treatment cycle for medications that are ordered directly from
ivpcare, our specialty pharmacy partner, and several hundred dollars in
laboratory costs for required infectious disease screening.
Is
egg freezing covered by insurance?
Extend Fertility is not aware of the availability of insurance coverage
for elective fertility preservation. However, we encourage individuals
to contact their insurance provider directly to understand their
personal coverage plan and eligibility for reimbursement.
How are the eggs retrieved?
At the end of the medication cycle the eggs are retrieved during an
outpatient procedure at an Extend Fertility partner center. The
physician gently collects the eggs using a guided ultrasound (there is
no incision). The procedure is performed under sedation for comfort, and
takes only 30 minutes with a recovery time of one hour.
What are the risks of the procedure?
Egg harvesting is a proven, safe procedure that is performed more than
100,000 times per year in egg donor and IVF cycles. The primary
complication is ovarian hyper-stimulation syndrome (OHSS) which can
result when women with poly-cystic ovaries are administered the hormone
injections. However, because women that are prone to OHSS can be
identified upfront during the initial medical consultation, the actual
risk of occurrence is very small. The other very rare complication is
bleeding and infection resulting from needle puncture at egg retrieval.
As with any medical procedure, there are risks associated with the
procedure and complications may arise. Please contact your medical
professional for additional information.
What are the side-effects of
egg freezing?
The primary side-effects result from the medication cycle, which happens
before the eggs are retrieved. Because the hormones stimulate the
maturation of multiple eggs for one month’s cycle (instead of the normal
maturation of 1 egg per cycle), a woman can expect to experience
bloating, discomfort and cramping.
How are the eggs “preserved”?
Following the egg retrieval procedure, the eggs are immediately
transferred to the laboratory for an advanced cryopreservation process
performed by an embryologist. This process has been fine-tuned to
accommodate the unique freezing requirements of egg cells. The eggs are frozen and stored in liquid nitrogen.
Advances in cryobiology have made it possible to keep living cells in a
suspended state, keeping them essentially ageless until you are ready to
use them.
Where are the eggs stored?
The eggs are stored in special holding tanks at the Extend Fertility
state-of-the-art cryopreservation facility. This secure facility
includes stringent quality controls, enhanced security, fault-tolerant
storage, controlled access and constant monitoring.
How long can eggs be stored?
Based on the science of cryobiology, once the eggs are frozen they are
in a “suspended” state and, thus, should not have a fixed shelf-life.
How do you use frozen eggs to achieve pregnancy?
When a woman is ready to get pregnant using her frozen eggs, she will
undergo one portion of the traditional In Vitro Fertilization (IVF)
procedure with an Extend Fertility partner center or an IVF clinic of
her choice. In IVF, eggs are thawed and mixed with the partner’s sperm
outside the body. These fertilized eggs mature into embryos, of which
one to three are then transferred to the uterus for implantation and
development into one or more babies. Over 100,000 IVF procedures are
performed each year and more than 1,000,000 babies have been born
through IVF. It is a safe and proven process, with no evidence of higher
birth defect rates among the babies born using this method.
Can a woman safely carry a child to term in her 40’s?
Most women in their 40s are not able to successfully carry a “natural”
pregnancy to term. However, when these women use donor eggs from younger
women, they can achieve the same pregnancy success rates as women in
their 20’s. This demonstrates that the primary cause of infertility and
miscarriages for older women is the quality/age of the egg. Extend
Fertility provides a way for those younger, “donor” eggs to be the
mother’s own eggs that have been harvested at a younger age and kept
essentially ageless using cryopreservation technology.
What is the first step in the process?
Contact Our Client Care Coordinators at 800-841-7197 to Get Started
Egg Freezing Client Profiles
Megan (Woman age 36), Classical Acupuncturist
Seattle, Washington WA (USA)
On why she decided to participate in
egg freezing with Extend Fertility:
“I was starting to feel that my desire to have children was putting pressure on my current relationship… deciding to participate in egg freezing helped me to separate the issues – yes, I want to have children, yes, I am in a relationship, but my desire to have children shouldn't cloud whether we should be having children together. I don’t want to have children until I feel emotionally and financially prepared.”
On how she feels now:
“Egg Freezing are a very empowering processes. I know there are no guarantees in this world, but it is a fantastic feeling to know I've done what I can to preserve my fertility along the way. Somehow egg freezing was really affirming of what I want in my life, even though I am not having children right this minute. I know I want to be a mother more strongly than when I began… It has removed some of the judgment of myself and self-criticism of wishing I had done this or that differently, or some blame I've placed on myself for not having children yet. I feel far less anxious about the future, no matter what the outcome - whether I get pregnant naturally at some point, whether I use these eggs, whether I adopt. Now it’s just more about becoming a mother eventually than judging my body for being not the "perfect" age biologically.”
On working with Extend Fertility in Egg Freezing:
“I felt very supported by the women at Extend Fertility - like they were truly my partners in this adventure, their egg freezing services help me and women like me to have more choices in the future. The women at Extend are smart, capable, kind women, there to help me achieve this thing I want. Working with Extend Fertility was so refreshing compared with trying to explain to others, even doctors, why I was worried about my fertility, and not having them get it or just give trite answers (like, “why make a such a big deal about this?”, “you're plenty young”, etc.). I really liked having these women support me in making the possibility of egg preservation and egg freezing real.”
On advice for women considering egg freezing with Extend Fertility:
“Listen to yourself. Consider what is most important to you, and don't worry about what other people have to say about it. Nobody can know but you what is truly important to you and how you want to make that happen. When I decided on egg freezing and that I was going to do it, and was in the process of it, I talked very openly to people about it as it was happening... At the coffee shop...how are you today? I'm great! I'm freezing my eggs! Because I found the experience totally empowering.”
Alexandra (Woman age 34), Pharmaceutical Sales
Boston, Massachusetts MA (USA)
On why she decided to freeze her eggs by egg freezing:
“Having a family has always been incredibly important to me and working in the medical community made me all too aware of the fact that my aging eggs could potentially jeopardize that dream. I also didn’t want to rush into a marriage that wasn’t right solely to have children. Egg freezing has removed the pressure.”
On how she feels now:
“I feel truly amazing…Relieved! I work in the women’s health care arena so I’m constantly bombarded with the scary biological clock story. I realized last week that I was listening to yet another horrifying presentation on the perils facing future mothers over 30 and for the first time I didn’t having a panic attack! I realized that I had taken control and done what I could to ensure the best chance of having a healthy and happy baby in the future by egg freezing. It’s also really nice that now thinking about having a family brings a sense of excitement because it just seems like much more of a reality and not a deadline that I am terrified of missing.”
On working with the Extend Fertility Egg Freezing Professionals:
“I did a lot of research on egg freezing programs and several of the female fertility clinics I contacted that advertised egg freezing and egg harvesting just didn’t seem to know much about it - I often felt like they were reading from a script. They also made me feel like I would be a peripheral egg freezing patient because I wasn’t doing IVF – egg freezing was just not what they specialized in. Then I contacted Extend Fertility about Egg Freezing and everything was totally different. It was amazing and reassuring to work with women who had actually participated in egg freezing or frozen their eggs themselves! I didn’t have to justify why I was pursuing egg freezing…they totally got me. The best part of the egg freezing process was that they had actually taken the medications and had their own eggs frozen so they really knew what they were talking about and what I could expect. I can’t say enough about the confidence they instilled in me and the emotional support they provided me at every step in the egg freezing process.”
On advice for other women considering egg freezing:
“If you’re over 33 and single or involved in a fast track career you must consider egg freezing now. I promise it will change your life. The women at Extend Fertility will absolutely help you with all aspects of egg freezing. You will NEVER regret egg freezing having frozen eggs…but you could very seriously regret not having preserved your eggs or participating in an egg freezing program when you had the chance.”
To request additional information on egg freezing please:
Call Extend Fertility at: 800-841-7197 or email:
info@extendfertility.com
Extend Fertility, Inc.
119 Braintree Street | Suite 507 | Boston, Massachusetts MA (USA)
02134
Phone: (800) 841-7197 | Outside U.S.: (617) 987-0506 | Fax: (617)
987-2137
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"For women who see their
fertility nearing its shelf life, egg freezing is the greatest thing
since birth control"
- Newsweek magazine
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