Treatment Overview
During in vitro fertilization (IVF), eggs and sperm are brought
together in a laboratory glass dish to allow the sperm to fertilize an egg.
With IVF, you can use any combination of your own eggs and sperm and donor eggs
and sperm.
See an illustration of the
female
reproductive system
.
Ovulation and egg retrieval. To prepare for
an assisted reproductive procedure using your own eggs, you will require
hormone treatment to control your egg production (ovulation). This is done to
prevent unpredictable ovulation, which would make it necessary to cancel that
in vitro attempt. This is generally done using one of two similar types of
gonadotropin-releasing hormone analogue (GnRH agonist or GnRH
antagonist). The following are two examples of how ovulation can be
controlled:
- Having about 10 days of nasal or injected GnRH
agonist that "shuts down" your
pituitary. Next, you undergo daily ovary-stimulating
hormone injections and close monitoring for 2 weeks before egg retrieval. At
home, you or your partner injects you with gonadotropin or
follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) to make your
ovaries produce multiple eggs (superovulation).
- Starting
treatment with FSH injections and adding GnRH antagonist injection after about
5 days, which stops the production of
luteinizing hormone (LH) within an hour or two.
After the first week, your doctor checks your blood estrogen levels
and uses
ultrasound to see whether eggs are maturing in the
follicles. During the second week, your dosage may
change based on test results, and you are monitored frequently with
transvaginal ultrasound and blood tests. If follicles fully develop, you are
given a human chorionic gonadotropin (hCG) injection to stimulate the follicles
to mature. The mature eggs are collected 34 to 36 hours later by needle
aspiration guided by ultrasound. You will usually have pain medicine and
sedation for this procedure.
Sperm collection. Sperm are collected by
means of masturbation or by taking sperm from the
scrotum through a small incision. This procedure is
performed when a blockage prevents sperm from being ejaculated or when there is
a problem with sperm development.
Fertilization and embryo transfer. The eggs
and sperm are placed in a glass dish and incubated with careful temperature,
atmospheric, and infection control for 48 to 120 hours. About 2 to 5 days after
fertilization, the best fertilized eggs are selected. Two to four are placed in
the uterus using a thin flexible tube (catheter) that is inserted through the
cervix. Those remaining may be frozen (cryopreserved) for future attempts.
Pregnancy and birth. Any
embryos that implant in the uterus may then result in
pregnancy and birth of one or more infants.
What To Expect After Treatment
Overall, in vitro fertilization (IVF)-related injections,
monitoring, and procedures are emotionally and physically demanding of the
female partner.
Superovulation with hormones requires regular blood
tests, daily injections (some of which are quite painful), frequent monitoring
by your doctor, and harvesting of eggs.
These procedures are done on an outpatient basis and require only a
short recovery time. You may have cramping during the procedure. You may be
advised to avoid strenuous activities for the remainder of the day or to be on
bed rest for a few days, depending on your condition and your doctor's
recommendation.
Why It Is Done
In vitro fertilization may be a treatment option if:
- A woman's
fallopian tubes are missing or blocked.
- A
woman has severe
endometriosis.
- A man has low sperm
counts.
- Artificial or intrauterine insemination
has not been successful.
- Unexplained infertility has continued for
a long time. How long a couple chooses to wait is influenced by the female
partner's age and other personal factors.
- A couple wants to test
for inherited disorders before embryos are transferred.
IVF can be performed even if a:
- Woman has had a
tubal ligation reversal surgery that was not
successful.
- Woman does not have fallopian
tubes.
- Woman's fallopian tubes are blocked and can't be
repaired.
IVF can be done using donor eggs for women who cannot produce their
own eggs due to advanced age or other causes.
How Well It Works
The number of women who give birth to a live infant after in vitro
fertilization varies depending on the cause of infertility. The success rate
for IVF can be as high as 40% for women under 30.1
However, IVF success varies widely depending mostly on the woman's age, the
cause of the couple's infertility, and pregnancy history.
The
aging
of the egg supply has a powerful effect on the chances that an
assisted reproductive technology (ART) procedure will
result in pregnancy and a healthy baby. Many women over age 40 choose to use
donor eggs, which greatly improves their chances of giving birth to a healthy
child.
Age. Birth rates resulting from a single
cycle of IVF using women's own eggs are about 30% to 40% for women age 34 and
younger, then decrease steadily after age 35.1
Pregnancy history. A woman who has already
had a live birth is more likely to have a successful ART procedure than a woman
who hasn't given birth before. This "previous birth advantage" gradually
narrows as women age from their early 30s to their 40s.1
Own eggs versus donor eggs. Birth rates are
affected by whether ART procedures use a woman's own eggs or donor eggs. Per
cycle of in vitro fertilization:1
- Using her own eggs, a woman's chances of having
a live birth decline from over 40% in her late 20s, to 30% at about age 38, and
to 10% by about age 43.
- Live birth rates are the same among younger
and older women using donor eggs. Women in their late 20s through mid 40s
average about a 50% birth rate using fresh (not frozen) embryos.
Donor frozen IVF embryos from a previous IVF cycle that are thawed
and transferred to the uterus are less likely to result in a live birth than
are donor fresh (newly fertilized) IVF embryos.1
However, frozen embryos are less expensive and less invasive for a woman,
because superovulation and egg retrieval aren't necessary.
You can consult the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
(CDC) national database for the latest ART success rates. See the complete CDC
listing of U.S. infertility clinics online in the latest Assisted Reproductive
Technology Success Rates report at
http://www.cdc.gov/reproductivehealth/art.htm. Success
rates in different programs can vary; couples are advised to talk to their
health professional and seek the most current information from the programs
they are considering.
Risks
In vitro fertilization (IVF) increases the risks of ovarian
hyperstimulation syndrome and multiple pregnancy.
- Severe
ovarian hyperstimulation syndrome, which rarely is
life-threatening, develops in 0.5% to 2% of all IVF cycles.2 Your doctor can minimize this risk by closely monitoring your
ovaries and hormone levels during
superovulation.
- Approximately 35% of
births in the United States that result from assisted reproductive technologies
such as IVF produce pregnancies with twins or more.3Multiple pregnancies are high-risk for both mother and
fetuses.
Your doctor will help you decide how many embryos to transfer, with
the goal of having a healthy pregnancy with one fetus. You should discuss this
decision before your treatment cycle begins, and again before embryo transfer.
Depending on your age and other factors, you may decide to limit the number of
embryos transferred to one, two, or three. If more than two embryos implant and
grow in your uterus, you will probably be counseled about
multifetal pregnancy reduction to increase the chances
of a healthy pregnancy and infant survival.
Embryo transfer success versus the risk of multiple pregnancy
For a woman over age 35 to maximize her chances of conceiving
with her own eggs and carrying a healthy pregnancy, she may choose to have more
embryos transferred than a younger woman would. However, this increases her
risk of multiple pregnancy.
Because of the risks of multiple pregnancy to the babies, the
American Society for Reproductive Medicine recommends that women under age 35
have no more than two embryos transferred, women age 35 to 37 have no more than
three, women 38 to 40 have no more than four transferred, and women who have
had repeated failed cycles or are over age 40 have no more than five embryos
transferred.4
Women over 40 have a high rate of embryo loss when using their
own eggs. As an alternative, older women can choose to use more viable donor
eggs.
What To Think About
Smoking has a damaging effect on fertility
and pregnancy. Smokers usually require more cycles of IVF to become pregnant
than nonsmokers.3 Smoking also endangers the health of
the fetus. As a result, some doctors do not provide infertility treatment to
women who smoke.
In vitro fertilization provides diagnostic information about
fertilization and embryo development (which is not the case with a
GIFT or ZIFT procedure).
Using
ultrasound to help collect eggs from the woman's
ovaries is less expensive, less risky, and less invasive than egg collection by
laparoscopy.
Although the underlying causes are not yet fully understood, babies
conceived with
assisted reproductive technology have slightly
higher rates of low birth weight and birth defects
than do babies conceived naturally.5, 6 Babies conceived using
intrauterine insemination (IUI) also have an increased
risk of low birth weight.7
In vitro fertilization costs approximately $10,000 to $15,000 per
cycle in the United States.
If you and your doctor are concerned about passing on a genetic
disorder to your child, preimplantation genetic diagnosis might be available.
Some genetic disorders can be identified with specialized testing before an
embryo is transferred, increasing the chances of
conceiving a healthy child.
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