Claire
Evans decided to freeze her eggs six years ago, when she was 36. She had just
broken up with her fiancé and was worried that her time to have a baby was
running out. A friend, whose own marriage had just ended, suggested the
procedure.
اضافة اعلان
She took
medications to stimulate her ovaries to overproduce eggs, which were frozen to
use later and to have a baby at an age when it would be difficult to become
pregnant without medical intervention.
The procedure of
egg freezing is an increasingly popular, but expensive, option for women who
want to delay childbirth. But new research documents some caveats: How old a
woman is when she freezes her eggs and how many eggs she freezes make a significant
difference in whether she will have a baby. Most women who tried to become
pregnant, the study found, did not succeed, often because they had waited until
they were too old to freeze eggs and had not frozen enough of them.
That note of
caution comes from data published this summer in a paper in the journal
Fertility and Sterility from the clinic where Evans froze her eggs — New York
University Langone Fertility Center.
Dr Marcelle Cedars,
professor and director of the division of reproductive endocrinology at the
University of California, San Francisco, who was not involved in the study,
said that although it involved just a single fertility clinic, “it is a center
that is unique for its long duration of follow-up”.
The data, she said,
is “sobering” and “should give women pause”. Cedars, who is also the president
of the American Society for Reproductive Medicine, added that many women “are
overly optimistic” about their chances of having a baby when they freeze their
eggs. It is not, as many assume, an insurance policy.
“The pregnancy rate
is not as good as I think a lot of women think it will be,” she said. “I always
tell patients, ‘There’s not a baby in the freezer. There’s a chance to get
pregnant.’”
The study, led by
Dr Sarah Druckenmiller Cascante, a fellow at NYU Langone, and Dr James Grifo,
director of the fertility center, reported that the average age when women
froze eggs was 38.3. On average, they waited four years to thaw and fertilize
their eggs.
The overall chance
of a live birth from the frozen eggs was 39 percent. But among women who were
younger than 38 when they froze their eggs, the live birthrate was 51 percent.
It rose to 70 percent if women younger than 38 also thawed 20 or more eggs.
The age of the
woman when she used the eggs to try to have a baby did not make a difference —
all that mattered was how old a woman was when she froze her eggs and how many
she froze.
“The reality is
most eggs don’t make good embryos,” Grifo said. “The more eggs you have, the
better the chance.”
According to the
Society for Assisted Reproductive Technology, the number of healthy women
freezing eggs rose to 12,438 in 2020, from 7,193 in 2016. But national data on
success rates is pretty much nonexistent, said Dr Timothy Hickman, president of
the society and medical director of CCRM Fertility in Houston.
“I commend them for
doing the study,” Hickman said of the NYU team.
Dr Alan Penzias, a
fertility specialist at Boston IVF Fertility Clinic and
Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, who is chair of the practice committee of the American Society
for Reproductive Medicine, said data from his center is consistent with the NYU
study. At his center, he said, women who froze their eggs had one-third of a
chance of having a baby when they thawed them.
“Counseling should
be clear that there is no guarantee and that the value of delaying having a
child must exceed the benefit of delay,” Penzias said.
That trade-off is
an issue with his 29-year-old daughter, Rebecca, Penzias said. Rebecca Penzias
— who gave him permission to mention her situation and use her name — wants to
freeze her eggs because she is studying for a doctorate and is not ready to
have a baby. Having some eggs frozen would give her peace of mind.
Alan Penzias told
her she does not need to freeze her eggs — she has plenty of years of fertility
ahead of her — but he considers her reason for freezing sufficient.
His wife, a
bioethicist and Rebecca Penzias’ stepmother, disagrees and said she should
finish her degree, then try to get pregnant without frozen eggs.
Rebecca Penzias
decided to freeze her eggs, planning to do so in October.
Before choosing to
freeze their eggs, women also must be prepared for substantial costs. Each egg
retrieval cycle can cost $10,000, Hickman said. The number of eggs collected varies
from woman to woman, and, for many, the only way to get a sufficient number to
make success likely is to have more than one cycle.
It costs an
additional $5,000 to $7,000 to thaw and fertilize the eggs, grow embryos in the
lab for a few days, then implant them in the woman’s uterus. Many women,
including Evans, have the embryos tested for chromosomal anomalies. That costs
an additional $3,000. And storage of frozen eggs can cost up to $1,000 a year.
Some companies’
health insurance policies cover at least part of the costs. But many do not.
Most women end up
never using their frozen eggs after paying for egg retrieval and storage, often
because they got pregnant on their own.
Evans, though, is a
success story. She was young enough when she froze eggs to have a good chance
of success and to be able to have eggs retrieved twice to accumulate 20 that
could be frozen.
She married in 2019
— to the same man she had been engaged to. Last year, she had her eggs thawed
and fertilized in a laboratory with her husband’s sperm. Seven months ago, she
had a baby girl, Fiona.
But the frozen eggs
did not work for Evans’ friend who encouraged her to undergo the procedure. In
2020, she had the 10 or so eggs she’d frozen, thawed, and fertilized.
None developed into viable embryos.
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