Whether you’re considering delaying having children or are facing circumstances that may impair your fertility in the future, fertility preservation offers flexibility and hope for your future family-building journey.
Fertility preservation is an umbrella term incorporating a number of proactive measures used to protect your reproductive potential for the future. It is relevant to both women and men, and involves freezing eggs, sperm, ovarian tissue, or embryos that can be later used to achieve pregnancy.
Choosing to pursue fertility preservation is a personal decision, influenced by a variety of factors including health, age, and life circumstances. Though having a baby now may be far from your mind, being proactive about your future family plans sooner rather than later can help keep your options open.
A consultation with Dr Huang will provide you with personalised advice, detailed information on each fertility preservation procedure suitable for you, and support throughout the decision-making process.
You may consider fertility preservation if you:
The process begins with an initial consultation with Dr Huang to assess your overall health and fertility status. This appointment will also give you an opportunity to discuss your reasons for considering egg freezing and fertility preservation, and to establish realistic expectations of a future pregnancy using your frozen eggs.
The egg freezing procedure is facilitated through Genea Melbourne City. You will be supported by Genea’s experienced administrative, nursing, and counselling teams, who will provide medication instructions, fee information, and what to expect during your egg freezing treatment.
Daily injections of fertility hormones self-administered at home over 10-14 days will increase the number of mature eggs you develop during a single menstrual cycle. These hormone medications typically consist of follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) and sometimes also luteinising hormone (LH). During this treatment phase, it is common to experience effects such as bloating, breast tenderness, or mood swings.
Egg retrieval is a minor surgical procedure performed in hospital under sedation to collect your eggs. A long, fine needle is inserted into your ovaries, guided by ultrasound, to suction the eggs directly from your ovarian follicles. The procedure typically takes about 15-20 minutes.
Immediately after retrieval, your eggs are assessed for maturity in Genea’s cutting-edge laboratory. Mature eggs are prepared for freezing through a process called vitrification, which rapidly cools the eggs to a glass-like state while avoiding the formation of damaging ice crystals. The frozen eggs are stored in liquid nitrogen tanks under constant monitoring until you are ready to use them.
When you are ready to use your frozen eggs, these eggs are thawed and fertilised with sperm with IVF. The resulting embryos are assessed before one is chosen for transfer to your uterus in the hope of achieving pregnancy.
Freezing your eggs effectively stops the biological clock at the age at which your eggs were frozen. With advancing age, your egg supply (ovarian reserve) and quality of the remaining eggs are slowly declining. Freezing your eggs at a younger age preserves a supply of “younger” and higher quality eggs for you to draw from when you feel more prepared for motherhood.
Because of this, proactive fertility preservation with egg freezing gives you flexibility and control to enter parenthood when the timing is right for you, without compromising the quality of your eggs. It can also offer peace of mind for those affected by fertility-impairing conditions and their treatments.
Your chances of having a baby from frozen eggs depend on several factors, including the age at which the eggs were frozen, how many eggs were collected, and what happens at each later stage such as thaw survival, fertilisation, embryo development, and transfer. In general, egg freezing is more effective at younger ages, because both egg number and egg quality are usually better.
The Australian Government-funded YouEggFreezeEstimator website provides estimates of the expected chance of a live birth from eggs frozen in one average egg freezing cycle. Based on those estimates:
It is important to understand that these figures are not a prediction of your personal chance of having a baby from your own frozen eggs. Rather, they are calculator-based estimates derived from previously published outcomes in women who froze eggs in the available literature. They are best used to help set expectations and support decision-making, rather than to guarantee what your own outcome will be.
Though Dr Huang has special expertise in egg freezing, other fertility preservation options are available.
An IVF/ICSI cycle may result in more than one viable embryo, though typically only one is selected for transfer to develop through pregnancy. You may choose to freeze and store any extra embryos that were not used for that pregnancy. These can later be used for future pregnancy attempts.
Ovarian tissue freezing is a lesser known fertility preservation option that may be considered for girls and women who are not suitable for egg freezing. This technique involves removing a section of your ovary, which is then frozen and stored. In the future, this ovarian tissue can be grafted back into your ovaries and return to its normal functions of producing hormones and maturing eggs.
Ovarian tissue freezing may be appropriate for pre-pubescent girls who have not yet started ovulating, but whose future fertility is at risk from certain medical treatments, genetic conditions, or gender affirming therapies.
Sperm freezing is ideal for men who wish to preserve their fertility prior to undergoing medical treatments that may compromise fertility. It can also be an option for those regularly exposed to environments that may impact sperm production or sperm quality, whether through trauma and injury or exposure to hazards such as chemicals, heat, or radiation.
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Testing may help identify ovulation issues, hormone imbalances, ovarian reserve concerns and other factors affecting fertility.
