Egg Freezing – Reality or Fiction?
Freezing and preserving ova (eggs) seems like
an attractive option for women nearing menopause,
those undergoing cancer treatment, or for those
who may want to postpone having children. While
cryopreservation of embryos (fertilized eggs)
has proven very successful as compared to freezing
unfertilized eggs, many women are turning to
ovum cryopreservation in an attempt to prolong
their fertility while postponing childbearing.
What is Cryopreservation?
Cryopreservation is a precise method used to
preserve embryos, eggs, ovarian tissue, and
sperm by cooling and storing them at a very
low temperature and then thawing them at a
future date for use.
Today, cryo-egg clinics are becoming more common
and many women and couples are buying into the
promise of being able to successfully freeze
their eggs and defer pregnancy. Women and couples
seeking fertility options are extremely vulnerable
and are often willing to invest an enormous amount
of money into egg cryopreservation even though
it has a very low chance of success.
Is Ovum Cryopreservation Successful?
“The reality is that in human studies,
millions and millions of eggs have been cryopreserved
with just a handful of babies born. So, the efficiency
of this system -- the starting number of eggs
to number of babies born -- is rather discouraging,” says
Christos
Coutifaris, MD, PhD, director of Penn
Fertility Care and professor of obstetrics and
gynecology at the University of Pennsylvania
Health System. “This is in sharp contrast
to the relatively highly successful freezing
and thawing of embryos (fertilized eggs).”
Although to date no babies have been born utilizing
cryopreserved ovarian tissue, animal studies
suggest that this method holds more promise than
the cryopreservation of single oocytes (immature
eggs). In Europe, a cancer patient had healthy
ovarian tissue cryopreserved and then transplanted
back into an ovary where ovulation later occurred.
Although not conclusive, experts agree that the
ovary with the transplanted ovarian tissue produced
the ovulation.
A September 2004 practice bulletin from the
American Society for Reproductive Medicine concluded
that the cryopreservation of both eggs and ovarian
tissue for cancer patients has significant potential
but at this time should remain an investigational
procedure with strict oversight and provided
at no charge to patients.
How Do I Know Which Fertility Option
is Right For Me?
Women are born with approximately one million
follicles in their ovaries and by puberty just
300,000 remain. This number continues to decline
until menopause when almost no follicles are
left in the ovaries.
“For women with a diminished ovarian reserve,
or who are experiencing early menopause, or who
have undergone cancer treatment, using eggs donated
by a young, healthy woman is the best chance
for conception and a live-birth,” says
Dr. Coutifaris.
For women who are having trouble conceiving,
a board-certified fertility specialist may be
able to help.
Donor Egg Program at Penn Fertility Care
Recent national data show an approximate 50 percent
live-birth rate for patients over age 38 who
used fresh donor eggs. The Donor
Egg Program at
Penn Fertility Care matches women who are unable
to produce a healthy
egg with an egg donor, to give infertile women
a chance at conception.
Penn is one of only eight centers in the nation
funded by the National Institutes of Health (NIH)
to perform clinical infertility research and
the only center funded by the NIH for laboratory
research specifically related to infertility.
To make an appointment with a specialist at
Penn Fertility Care, please call 1-800-789-PENN
(7366).
When Should You See a Fertility Specialist?
- If
you are under age 35 and have not conceived
after a year of trying to get pregnant.
- If you
are age 35 or older and have been unable
to conceive after six months of
trying.
- If you have lost two or more
pregnancies to miscarriage.
- If other
infertility treatments have not been successful.
- If
you do not have regular menstrual cycles,
or have had a prior gynecological
problem (e.g. endometriosis, tubal
pregnancy, pelvic
surgery or infections), you should
seek assistance sooner.
| Help
Build a Family Through Egg Donation |
Many infertile
couples make the decision to receive
a donated egg, which can be an essential
step in achieving a pregnancy. Some
women are unable to produce healthy
eggs or have other factors that prevent
them from using their own eggs.
Penn Fertility Care is looking for
healthy women, ages 21 to 33, who
are interested in helping others
through egg donation. Generous compensation
is offered to donors for their time
and travel.
For more information about the Penn
Donor Egg Program, please call
1-800-789-PENN
(7366), or visit pennmedicine.org/fertility.
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