New Hope Fertility Center is intently focused on maintaning its industry leading IVF success rates. As you may have read on our site, we offer unique protocols that are customized to your individual body. Because of our patient-centered approach, we are able to offer extremely low cancellation rates. Indeed, it is very rare that we will ever have to cancel your cycle because of too few eggs.
Additionally, we are longstanding champions of Single Embryo Transfers to make sure that procedures are safe for both the mother and the children they hope to bring into the world. Our success rates reflect both of these philosophies and make New Hope Fertility Center your best option for gentle, successful, IVF.
| Non-Donor: Under 35 | Donor (all ages) | |||
| Fresh Embryos | Thawed Embryos | Fresh Embryos | Thawed Embryos | |
| Number of cycles: | 119 | 253 | 8 | 53 |
| Percentage of cycles resulting in live births: | 37.0 | 44.3 | 62.5 | 64.4 |
| Average number of embryos transferred: | 1.2 | 1.1 | 1.4 | 1.2 |
Click the following link to read more about understanding IVF success rates.
If you are in the process of choosing a fertility care center, you probably have already examined the Society of Reproductive Technology (SART) national IVF success rate data and are beginning to compare prospective pregnancy success rates for your age group. If you plan to use conventional IVF and multiple-embryo transfers and your fertility health perfectly matches that of the "ideal IVF candidate" in your age group, then SART data may indeed be a reliable benchmark for you.
However, because New Hope Fertility Center specializes in Natural Cycle and Mini-IVF™ treatments and promotes single-embryo transfers (to reduce risks associated with multiple births), it is difficult to compare our data with that of SART and other clinics since SART only tracks success rates of conventional IVF and multiple-embryo transfers. To afford you some kind of comparison, the information below reports our live birth rates and a what-if scenario that statistically represents what live birth rates would be had we transferred the same number of embryos as other SART clinics.
Our data is presented as a comparison against national IVF success averages provided by the SART. SART compiles reported data from 392 US fertility clinics (85 percent of all U.S. clinics) and presents the data for the industry and for patients in aggregate, by clinic, and by infertility cause. Click here to see their reports.
We transfer an average of 1.48 embryos per cycle compared to the average 2.92 other clinics transfer. Transferring double the embryos skews success rate data and does not necessarily mean that other clinics are more successful, only that their patients have a 13 to 33 percent chance for twins versus our eight percent chance for twins. You can see with the following outline that we are equally successful with our Mini-IVF™ treatment. If we also transferred two to three embryos, our live birth rates would be similar to SART, as you can see in our what-if column. The converse is also true: If SART's transfer rate matched ours, their live birth rates would be statistically lower and similar to ours.
Our frozen embryo live birth rates are significantly higher than our fresh transfer cycles. We have a 42 percent frozen live birth rate for women under 35, which rivals SART's fresh live birth rate and exceeds their frozen rate. This should give confidence to women and couples who preserve their fertility by freezing embryos for their Embryo Bank. Our frozen success rates are higher because our vitrification freezing method is superior to conventionally employed cryopreservation techniques. Additionally, we typically only freeze blastocyst embryos, which have a 40 percent greater chance of pregnancy than Day 2, Day 3, or Day 4 embryos (which we often use in our fresh embryo transfer cycles).
If you are over 39, it is important to understand that most conventional IVF clinics deny treatment to women your age because they produce fewer eggs, even with high doses of IVF drugs. When clinics do accept women in this age bracket, they accept only those who have FSH levels and other "ideal IVF candidate" criteria similar to younger women. As a result, conventional IVF clinics skew their success data higher for women in older age groups by selecting only "ideal IVF candidates." Unfortunately, this makes the SART data misleading for women 39 years of age and older.
Many women denied conventional treatment turn to New Hope Fertility Center. Our One-Good-Egg Policy welcomes women who have been denied treatment due to age or FSH level. Our success data often skews downwards because the eggs of women 39-plus years old are often of lower quality and are less likely to produce a live birth.
A basic grounding in the variables affecting pregnancy success rates allow you to make an informed decision when it comes to choosing a fertility care center. In fact, this knowledge can change how you view success rate data, either rendering it quite meaningful or quite meaningless to you. Some of the numerous scientific factors that influence the outcome of every woman's IVF treatment are FSH levels, age, the number of unsuccessful IVF attempts (or the number of unsuccessful natural attempts), ovarian reserve, stress, weight and BMI, structural or mechanical problems with the reproductive system, the age of the embryo at the time of transfer (Day 2, 3, 4 or blastocyst), and the number of eggs produced in a given cycle.
What is hidden from view in the SART data is the number of women who were denied treatment because one or more of the above-mentioned factors were unsatisfactory. For example, many clinics will not accept women older than 39 with FSH levels above 15, or women anticipated to make less than two eggs in each cycle. If you have unsatisfactory metrics for any of the above issues, the SART data may be a meaningless guide to gauge what you can expect, since it largely represents women with the "best" fertility health.
Also, remember SART only measures success of conventional IVF, not Natural Cycle and Mini-IVF™ treatments or single-embryo transfers. This fact is an unfortunate drawback of reporting success data (for the industry and the consumer) because many clinics select only ideal candidates to make their success rate data higher. In addition, clinics also cancel cycles for women who have been accepted into the IVF program and these cancellation rates (cycles cancelled before egg retrieval) are high, falling between eight and 19 percent.
Our One-Good-Egg Policy is patient-friendly, FSH-friendly and age-friendly. It does not include strict criteria designed to limit care or boost our success data. We know that taking on very difficult infertility cases can lower our overall success rate, but we are committed to providing treatment to all those who seek it, regardless of the difficulty of their case.
You can click here to see a chart with some of our success rates.
Home| FAQ| Site Map| Contact Us| Terms & Privacy Policy
New Hope Affiliates in: Mexico| Russia| China| New Jersey| Philadelphia| Massachusetts| Connecticut
© Copyright 2007-2011 New Hope Fertility Center. All Rights Reserved.