IVF Success Rates by Age in 2022 | New CDC Data | IVF success on the first time? | FertilitySpace

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  • Опубликовано: 6 июл 2024
  • Here, we take a look at the newest IVF success rates from the CDC in 2022 to see what your chances of getting pregnant are with IVF based on your age!
    Every year, the CDC collects IVF data from fertility clinics across the United States and puts out a report on the current live birth rates for women using their own eggs for IVF.
    This data reports on the IVF success rates from 2020, which is the most current IVF data available in 2022.
    The data is stratified into 4 age groups so that you can get an idea of what the success rates are based on your age.
    The AGE groups we will be looking at are women doing IVF aged:
    - less than 35 years old
    - 35-37 years old
    - 38-40 years old
    - over 40 years old
    IVF Success rates 2022
    In this video, we’ll be looking at:
    -IVF Success Rates by Age in 2022
    -IVF Success First Time
    -How popular is ICSI in IVF?
    -How popular is PGT in IVF?
    -Fertility Clinic IVF Success Rates
    TIMESTAMPS
    0:00 Intro to IVF Success Rates
    0:14 Which IVF metrics we looked at
    2:05 IVF Success Rates by Age in 2022 (All births)
    2:31 IVF Success Rates by Age in 2022 (Singleton Live Birth)
    2:54 IVF Success Rate First Time
    3:29 How common is ICSI in IVF?
    3:43 How common is PGT in IVF?
    3:57 Fertility Clinic IVF Success Rates
    Want to see IVF success rates for your fertility clinic?
    Check your clinic at fertilityspace.io/search
    DEFINITIONS
    When we look at success rates, we don't look at the clinical pregnancy rate, we look at the live birth rate. This tells you how many IVF cycles actually resulted in the birth of a baby, which tells you much more useful information for your fertility journey.
    ALL LIVE BIRTHS means the success rate for IVF cycles where any number of babies were born, so this includes the birth of a single baby, or twins, triplets, etc.
    Singleton Live Birth means the percent of IVF cycles that resulted in the birth of just a single baby. So no twins or triplets are counted in this data.
    ICSI is a method of fertilizing eggs in IVF where an embryologist injects the sperm into the egg in an attempt to fertilize it.
    PGT stands for preimplantation genetic testing, which can be done in an IVF cycle to genetically test an embryo to see whether it's cells contain the correct number of chromosomes needed for life, or in certain cases can detect a chromosomal rearrangement, or detect whether an embryo will inherit a specific genetic disease that a parent is known to be a carrier for.
    Resources mentioned in this video:
    Centers for Disease Control (CDC) IVF Success Rates: www.cdc.gov/art/artdata/index...
    BLOG version - IVF Success Rates by Age in 2022 - CDC National Data:
    fertilityspace.io/blog/ivf-su...
    IUI vs IVF: Which should you do?
    fertilityspace.io/blog/iui-vs...
    How is a woman's fertility tested?
    fertilityspace.io/blog/fertil...
    Questions to ask your fertility doctor during your first visit:
    fertilityspace.io/blog/first-...
    Learn about PGT-A for IVF:
    fertilityspace.io/blog/pgt-a-...
    Wondering what happens during the IVF PROCESS?
    Check out our article detailing the entire IVF process and timeline: fertilityspace.io/blog/a-guid...
    Reach out with any questions!
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    Facebook: / fertilityspace.io
    Twitter: / fertilityspace_
    Subscribe for more educational content about infertility and fertility treatments:
    / @fertilityspace
    • IVF Success Rates by A...

Комментарии • 20

  • @wcastenell1
    @wcastenell1 2 года назад +4

    Do you have the data for the percentage of live births from frozen embryo transfers only? I’m planning to do an FET with donated embryos this year, and I’m over 40, and I’m wondering what the general success rates are in those cases. Thanks!

  • @mizanurrahmanchowdhury5904
    @mizanurrahmanchowdhury5904 Год назад

    Iam interested Ivf total cost please

  • @jenniferconly7559
    @jenniferconly7559 2 года назад +3

    Are the success rates based on those that had or didn’t have genetic testing?

    • @fertilityspace
      @fertilityspace  2 года назад

      Great question! These success rates are for all IVF cycles reported in 2020, so these outcomes include both IVF cycles that had genetic testing and cycles that did not test. About half of embryo transfers in 2020 included an embryo that had genetic testing. The CDC reported that for all ages, 48% of embryo transfer cycles included at least one embryos tested by PGT. It would be nice if they would provide the data in a more granular format so that we could compare but they lump all the success rates in together for this. I hope that's helpful!

  • @rheajoy4039
    @rheajoy4039 2 года назад +3

    May I ask, because I didn’t quite understand. Success rates for one cycle or cumulative? Or success rates over a year? Does it include frozen transfers? Does it include all embryos retrieved from one stimulation? Thank you for clarifying 😊

    • @fertilityspace
      @fertilityspace  2 года назад +2

      Good question! For the first two charts, the Live Birth Rate and the Singleton Live Birth Rate, these are cumulative for all IVF retrievals that occurred in one year. So these success rates are for all IVF retrievals that started in 2020 so the same woman may have done multiple egg retrievals in a year that would be included, however it's a very large data set (148,335 cycles).
      Calculating Live Birth Rate: this success rate counts how many babies were born per intended egg retrieval.
      So we're looking at whether the egg retrieval led to a baby, regardless of how many embryo transfers someone did from all the eggs they got from that one retrieval.
      So it's looking at number of babies born / number of intended egg retrievals x 100 to get the percentage. The CDC gives a good example for how the calculations are made:
      For example,
      if a clinic started 60 intended egg retrievals,
      and these resulted in 30 live-birth deliveries,
      the average live-birth delivery rate for
      intended retrievals would be 30 (live-birth
      deliveries) ÷ 60 (intended retrievals) = 0.5,
      or 50.0% of intended retrievals resulting in a
      live-birth delivery.
      These success rates include babies born from both fresh and frozen embryo transfers. Yes it would include all embryos transferred as it's looking at live births per stimulation regardless of how many transfers someone has done from that one cycle. Because the success rate is per cycle in this case, if someone did 3 embryo transfers from 1 IVF cycle and she got pregnant on the third, it would be counted as 1 live birth from 1 IVF retrieval cycle here.
      For the New Patient IVF Success Rates, that is looking at just the first IVF cycle for each patient and whether a pregnancy resulted from the first IVF cycle. So that would be looking at whether any of the embryo transfers from their first ever egg retrieval led to a live birth.
      I hope that makes sense!

    • @rheajoy4039
      @rheajoy4039 2 года назад

      @@fertilityspace yes, it absolutely makes sense! Thank you very much!

    • @fertilityspace
      @fertilityspace  2 года назад

      @@rheajoy4039 you're very welcome!

    • @verayu9621
      @verayu9621 2 года назад +1

      @@fertilityspace may i ask one more question, if someone were to freeze her own eggs and decided not to thaw her eggs for any embryo transfers until years later. In this specific case, what metrics shall be looking at on Sart as a more relevant indicator? "live brith rates per additional frozen embryo transfer" or live birth rates per new patient/egg retrieval" (i feel the latter ones might be too general for specific situations)? recently, as I was doing my research on clinics, I found one clinic that has good success stats on " live brith per additional frozen embryo transfer " (hitting nearly 60%) , however the same clinic hits extremely low success rates on "live birth rates per new patient/ per egg retrieval " (around 18%) , how does that even possible? Meaning they are just good at thawing frozen embryos solely (not even from frozen eggs) ? or does that mean frozen embryos are considered easier to be operated ? Sorry , i'm just confused with those categories .. too complicated.. it will really help a lot if you could help me out here. Many thanks in advance!!

    • @fertilityspace
      @fertilityspace  Год назад

      @@verayu9621 This is such a great question! Sifting through all the IVF data can be really confusing in cases like this.
      The reason these two success rates from the same clinic look so drastically different is that these success rates are looking at totally different stages of the IVF cycle.
      Live birth rate per egg retrieval is looking at the success rates from the start of the cycle all the way through to the end. So this metric includes all women that started an IVF cycle and looked at the outcome. Some of these women may have had to cancel their cycle partway, or didn’t retrieve any eggs, or no eggs fertilized, or no embryos developed, or had all abnormal embryos. Then other women may have done a fresh transfer of an embryo and it was abnormal and led to a failed cycle. So there are a lot of points at which an IVF cycle could have failed when looking at all women who started IVF from the point of egg retrieval. This makes the success rate lower but is more realistic if you’re starting an IVF cycle from the beginning because it takes into account all of the stages that need to go right.
      If you already have frozen embryos, then looking at the success rates per additional transfer makes more sense. These embryos, as they were frozen, have already made it to the point where the egg fertilized, the embryos developed normally, and many of these will have also been tested by PGT-A before transfer to confirm that they have the correct number of chromosomes. So this is one of those cases where the success rate would be higher because you’re much further down the chain of events before you start to look at the success rate. If you are at the point of getting embryos frozen and in many of these cases transferring a PGT-A normal embryo, then your chances are about 60% of having an embryo transfer lead to a live birth.
      If you have frozen eggs, I would still personally look at the live birth rate per egg retrieval because you’re still toward the start of the IVF process and there’s still attrition that’s going to happen from some eggs not fertilizing, some embryos not developing, and then some embryos being abnormal. So looking at the live birth rate per egg retrieval for the age that you were at the time of your egg freezing will give you the best information.
      Make sure you’e using the age category for how old you were when you froze the eggs, because the age of the eggs are more important for correlating success rates compared to how old you are when you do an embryo transfer.
      I hope this is helpful! It is so complicated so I hope that shed some light on how to navigate all the data!

  • @angelasoWA
    @angelasoWA Год назад +1

    Any data for women using donor eggs?

    • @fertilityspace
      @fertilityspace  Год назад

      Yes! Check out our video on IVF Success Rates using Donor Eggs: ruclips.net/video/LT0NKcxLXi0/видео.html
      Hope that’s helpful! 💕

  • @mizanurrahmanchowdhury5904
    @mizanurrahmanchowdhury5904 Год назад +1

    Iam interested Ivf total cost please my wife age 33 husband (43 two tube block please

    • @fertilityspace
      @fertilityspace  Год назад

      This might help understand the breakdown of IVF cost: fertilityspace.io/blog/the-cost-of-ivf-in-2022
      In the US it can depend on the clinic and the location you’re in but IVF can range from $18k-$25k typically.
      It’s best to reach out to clinics you’re interested in to get a breakdown of cost!
      You can use our clinic search to find clinics in different areas and contact them to get some more info: fertilityspace.io/search

  • @emiliamaria0718
    @emiliamaria0718 Год назад +2

    If person doesnt have problem getting pregnant, just want to do IFV just to choose the gender?? How much is it??

    • @claireoneill9205
      @claireoneill9205 Год назад

      Hi! Great question. Your cost will depend on whether medical insurance will cover any part of your treatment. Sometimes there is a diagnosis code that will work for your situation. If you are paying without insurance, the cost of IVF is usually around $20k - $25k depending on the clinic. The location also affects how much so it’s good to consult a couple clinics for their prices. I hope that’s helpful!

    • @DillinghamVeronica
      @DillinghamVeronica Год назад +1

      We used Ingenes, it was $25k for three rounds. Financing is available and an easy approval

    • @emiliamaria0718
      @emiliamaria0718 Год назад +1

      @@DillinghamVeronica wow that's expensive 😳 I just wanted for choice of gender.