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Re: IVF without PGS
Wife is 39 and we had 14 retrieved, 10 fertilize, 4 make it to day 5 blastocyst and after PGS only 1 normal embryo. We did a FET and are now 15 weeks pregnant with a healthy girl.
PGS saved us headache of possibly transferring 3 bad embryos that would have ended in MC. I would always recommend PGS to anyone that has the money or over 35.
TTC - since 2014
7 rounds of Clomid - BFN
IUI #1 - October 2015 - BFN
IUI #2 - November 2015 - BFN
IUI #3 - December 2015 - BFN
IVF #1 - March 2016
Retrieval #1 - April 2016
FET #1 - May 2016 - BFP!!! DS - Born January 2017
Trying for baby #2...
FET #2 - January 2018 - BFN
No more embryos left; switched to a new RE
IVF/Retrieval #2 - January 2019
IVF/Retrieval #3 - March 2019
FET #3 - April 2019 - BFP!!! - DD: Born December 2019
Trying for baby #3...
FET #4 - October 2021 - BFP!!! - Due June 2022
Going into IVF, I had also decided against PGS testing. My reason is simple, I rather have a non implantation or MC than "discard" my embryo due to some "abnormalities". I'm 36 so my RE was strongly recommending that we consider doing one; however, we only had 1 embryo survived so decision became moot at that point. "TW" I had FET of our one and only NON-PGS tested embryo and had my healthy daughter 6 weeks ago! Also, except for the fetal echo, I didn't do any of the prenatal testings!
Goodluck!
My 7 Year Journey ***Tw in spoiler***
IVF #1 - September 2018; Follistim, Menopur, Cetrotide & Lupron/HCG combo trigger; PGS; ICSI
Back on Levothyroxine
FET #1 - October 2018; cancelled, all PGS aneuploid
FET #1 - November 30th, transferred anyway
Wondfo BFP 5dp5dt, CB Digi 6dpt,
1st Beta on 7dpt 93
2nd Beta on 10dpt 510!
TTC #1 since 2011. Tried for 5 years before we knew there was a one year rule.
Diag w/MS 2016; w/PCOS & IF 2017
New RE 2018; PCOS diagnosis taken away, IF due to ovary adhesions, but prev. RE insists PCOS IF
IUI
IUI #1 July 2017 w/100mg Clo+trigger; BFN; benched w/big cysts
IUI #2 October 2017 w/50mg Clo+trigger; BFN; benched w/big cysts
IUI #3 February 2018 w/5mg Femara+trigger; low P
BFP February; mc March; Subclinical hypothyroid started Levothyroxine
IUI #4 March 2018 w/7.5mg Femara+trigger; BFN
Medicated cycle & TI April 2018 w/7.5mg Femara+trigger; BFN
Tried several cycles on our own; all BFN
And yes, our embryo with an abnormal # of chromosomes, non mosaic, is completely healthy.
My 7 Year Journey ***Tw in spoiler***
IVF #1 - September 2018; Follistim, Menopur, Cetrotide & Lupron/HCG combo trigger; PGS; ICSI
Back on Levothyroxine
FET #1 - October 2018; cancelled, all PGS aneuploid
FET #1 - November 30th, transferred anyway
Wondfo BFP 5dp5dt, CB Digi 6dpt,
1st Beta on 7dpt 93
2nd Beta on 10dpt 510!
TTC #1 since 2011. Tried for 5 years before we knew there was a one year rule.
Diag w/MS 2016; w/PCOS & IF 2017
New RE 2018; PCOS diagnosis taken away, IF due to ovary adhesions, but prev. RE insists PCOS IF
IUI
IUI #1 July 2017 w/100mg Clo+trigger; BFN; benched w/big cysts
IUI #2 October 2017 w/50mg Clo+trigger; BFN; benched w/big cysts
IUI #3 February 2018 w/5mg Femara+trigger; low P
BFP February; mc March; Subclinical hypothyroid started Levothyroxine
IUI #4 March 2018 w/7.5mg Femara+trigger; BFN
Medicated cycle & TI April 2018 w/7.5mg Femara+trigger; BFN
Tried several cycles on our own; all BFN
I remember seeing this post on the bump before where someone retested their embryos and got very different results.
https://forums.thebump.com/discussion/12707282/pgs-results-are-not-reliable-word-of-caution-own-experience-literature
Doctors need to let people know testing is not 100% before pushing it. I think there's a place for it if you're someone with recurrent miscarriages or you have a ton of embryos that you won't be able to use anyways. It's sad to think though that there are women with failed IVF cycles who may have had the chance to have a healthy pregnancy because of potentially false abnormal results.
@caitiemae We have not given birth yet. I won't be allowing CVS or an Amnio during pregnancy. We might have him tested after birth but not sure yet. Well, no test is 100% accurate. Maybe they figure that should be a given in everyones' mind. Both of our previous RE and our current RE were completely surprised by our decision to transfer and by the health of our baby. I have heard that testing does help those with RPL to cut down on any chromosome patterns that are known to cause mc so that's a good thing since mc is harmful to the Mother in more ways than one.
You are correct that two different labs can differ drastically from each other. It's just the nature of biopsy. This same thing happened with my Dad's tumor samples in 2017. If you're testing from different parts, you'll get different results. It's strange that it happens, but it does. Plus though, embryos have the ability to correct themselves in the process so that's pretty cool too. Hey, there is an article I read awhile back that might interest you about aneuploid embryos. To be completely honest, I can't say that I wouldn't have been picky and choosy if we didn't receive a 100% aneuploidy rate.
TW***** there are pictures of babies https://www.thecut.com/2017/09/ivf-abnormal-embryos-new-last-chance.html
My 7 Year Journey ***Tw in spoiler***
IVF #1 - September 2018; Follistim, Menopur, Cetrotide & Lupron/HCG combo trigger; PGS; ICSI
Back on Levothyroxine
FET #1 - October 2018; cancelled, all PGS aneuploid
FET #1 - November 30th, transferred anyway
Wondfo BFP 5dp5dt, CB Digi 6dpt,
1st Beta on 7dpt 93
2nd Beta on 10dpt 510!
TTC #1 since 2011. Tried for 5 years before we knew there was a one year rule.
Diag w/MS 2016; w/PCOS & IF 2017
New RE 2018; PCOS diagnosis taken away, IF due to ovary adhesions, but prev. RE insists PCOS IF
IUI
IUI #1 July 2017 w/100mg Clo+trigger; BFN; benched w/big cysts
IUI #2 October 2017 w/50mg Clo+trigger; BFN; benched w/big cysts
IUI #3 February 2018 w/5mg Femara+trigger; low P
BFP February; mc March; Subclinical hypothyroid started Levothyroxine
IUI #4 March 2018 w/7.5mg Femara+trigger; BFN
Medicated cycle & TI April 2018 w/7.5mg Femara+trigger; BFN
Tried several cycles on our own; all BFN
You can contact Vicken Sahakian at Pacific Fertility Center here in Los Angeles. He has a 60% success rate and he will tell you that he's willing to transfer Aneuploid embryos and can give you a list of all of his colleagues he has known in the last 20 years who will too.
Obviously it's a huge and very personal decision and I'm not advocating for either way. I only shared my experience and shared facts that I learned along the way. Hope you and your wife are doing well. It's good to see you!
My 7 Year Journey ***Tw in spoiler***
IVF #1 - September 2018; Follistim, Menopur, Cetrotide & Lupron/HCG combo trigger; PGS; ICSI
Back on Levothyroxine
FET #1 - October 2018; cancelled, all PGS aneuploid
FET #1 - November 30th, transferred anyway
Wondfo BFP 5dp5dt, CB Digi 6dpt,
1st Beta on 7dpt 93
2nd Beta on 10dpt 510!
TTC #1 since 2011. Tried for 5 years before we knew there was a one year rule.
Diag w/MS 2016; w/PCOS & IF 2017
New RE 2018; PCOS diagnosis taken away, IF due to ovary adhesions, but prev. RE insists PCOS IF
IUI
IUI #1 July 2017 w/100mg Clo+trigger; BFN; benched w/big cysts
IUI #2 October 2017 w/50mg Clo+trigger; BFN; benched w/big cysts
IUI #3 February 2018 w/5mg Femara+trigger; low P
BFP February; mc March; Subclinical hypothyroid started Levothyroxine
IUI #4 March 2018 w/7.5mg Femara+trigger; BFN
Medicated cycle & TI April 2018 w/7.5mg Femara+trigger; BFN
Tried several cycles on our own; all BFN
we just had a chemical pregnancy on a fresh cycle and have gone back and forth about pgs on our frozens. I get how a lab could make a mistake. It’s discomforting tho. Hard decisions to make..
1. We got results of all embryos but no mosaicism was disclosed. One embryo on the list was XYY (nothing to do with mosaicism yet because we don't know which are and which aren't). Your provider has to check a box on the form for the lab to disclose mosaicism on the report. We requested and signed consents.
2. Lab re-issued results of all embryos along with which are mosaic and which aren't. One embryo on the list was changed from XYY to XXY (this is the same embryo on the initial report because there are coded numbers so you can see which are which) (this embryo also did not come back mosaic on the 2nd report). I contacted them freaking out because how can it change from XYY to XXY. They assured me it was an administrative error.
3. Lab re-issued the 2nd report with the correction back to XYY, still not mosaic.
TL; DR--it was never mosaic, always resulted aneuploid.
Does that make more sense?
We only had one mosaic on our report and it was a low level trisomy 13 yet is one of our A+ in appearance. It's insane to me how appearance can be so different from biopsy. The trisomy 13 is a girl. There was one or two embryos with a piece that was mosaic, but there were other trisomies/monosomies along with it. For example, it could be that the q arm of a piece of chromosome 5 was mosaic, but there was also an 80% trisomy result for chromosome 9. They would only consider that mosaic if there was no +9 along with it. When I say 80% trisomy results, it's 80% of the 5-6 cells they biopsied out of the over 100 in the entire embryo, again only being able to biopsy from the part that becomes the placenta. I sat on the phone with a genetics counselor from Cooper Genomics for an hour and a half and typed everything she said verbatim. We had a ton of questions.
It is a really tough decision and I'm so sorry for your loss. We are no strangers to loss either, but I can imagine it's a different kind of cruel happening during IVF. For us, it was during IUI. Hugs
My 7 Year Journey ***Tw in spoiler***
IVF #1 - September 2018; Follistim, Menopur, Cetrotide & Lupron/HCG combo trigger; PGS; ICSI
Back on Levothyroxine
FET #1 - October 2018; cancelled, all PGS aneuploid
FET #1 - November 30th, transferred anyway
Wondfo BFP 5dp5dt, CB Digi 6dpt,
1st Beta on 7dpt 93
2nd Beta on 10dpt 510!
TTC #1 since 2011. Tried for 5 years before we knew there was a one year rule.
Diag w/MS 2016; w/PCOS & IF 2017
New RE 2018; PCOS diagnosis taken away, IF due to ovary adhesions, but prev. RE insists PCOS IF
IUI
IUI #1 July 2017 w/100mg Clo+trigger; BFN; benched w/big cysts
IUI #2 October 2017 w/50mg Clo+trigger; BFN; benched w/big cysts
IUI #3 February 2018 w/5mg Femara+trigger; low P
BFP February; mc March; Subclinical hypothyroid started Levothyroxine
IUI #4 March 2018 w/7.5mg Femara+trigger; BFN
Medicated cycle & TI April 2018 w/7.5mg Femara+trigger; BFN
Tried several cycles on our own; all BFN
@suzycupcake I have mentioned this before but I guess every time I see that article from The Cut I'm going to mention it, the article uses terminology in a way that is not consistent in the article -- mosaic and abnormal are used interchangeably and most clinicians would say that the genetic health of an embryo is a spectrum so precision is important. Further, the results discussed are anecdotal, they reflect a very tiny sample size. I think the results are meaningful but I also think the issue needs further study. I also think when you disclose you transferred an aneuploid embryo you do need to disclose the genetic issue was sex chromosome related. Again, genetic conditions are a spectrum, and also embryos maybe very disordered or have only a couple of disordered cells, another spectrum. There are conditions that are survivable and not painful to a child, and there are conditions that, if known, are truly nightmares and I do not think clinicians treat them all the same or have the same willingness to transfer. eta Also, I would say you used PGS in exactly the way it was intended - as a prioritization tool. You had other embryos you could have transferred but you transferred the one that had the best likelihood of success and a healthy child.
@somewhereinnyc I think it's generally a very personal decision to do PGS. How many embryos did you get in your cycle? Did you do a 3 or 5 day transfer? How old are you? *TW in spoiler
Yah it sucked but the silver lining is that it’s a chemical pregnancy so it was very early and I’m hoping it resolves on its own (no drugs or procedures or drawn out process) and we can transfer one of our frozens in a modified natural cycle (no shots and no dreaded PIO) next month. We also have insurance coverage for 2 more transfers. This was really rough but I’ve got lots to be thankful for.. including my husband and support from you ladies on this Valentine’s Day 💖💔.
I do not think I will do PGS on the next couple transfers- especially after hearing these stories. I also learned it’s like 6k out of pocket for how many I have frozen at Cornell (!)
@murph145 I’ve read somewhere about a doctor transferring only aneuploid embryos with a single lethal chromosomal error. In this case, if the PGS testing is accurate, then the embryo won’t grow and will result in failed implantation or early miscarriage.
Unexplained infertility/AMA, polycystic ovaries, insulin resistance
FET#1(July 2017): eSET of first of 4 PGS-normal embryos, DS born 3/30/2018
FET#2(Oct/Nov 2019): eSET
TLDR -- PGS is still very new, very pricey and not likely to make a great difference in success. Having a m/c or chemical is unfortunately common and usually does not mean that you won't go on to a successful pregnancy later. I think a chemical particularly doesn't signal that there was anything wrong with the embryo -- you might just need to change up your protocol if it happens again, maybe you need more hormones or less, etc.
Summer 2015 - no BFP yet, labs normal, referred to RE
Fall 2015 - Summer 2016 - Further testing all normal. 3 IUI's -- BFN. Recommended move to IVF. Planned cycle for fall 2016.
September 2016 - Surprise natural BFP. MMC @ 8 weeks. RE expressed confidence that we just needed the 'right' embryo.
Fall 2016 - Spring 2017 -- Break from TTC
June 2017 - Started IVF; egg retrieval for freeze all cycle. 9 mature eggs retrieved, 5 fertilized. 2 4BB embies on ice.
August 2017 - FET transfer both embies. BFP. Twin pregnancy confirmed by ultrasound. EDD 4/28/18
September 2017 - Twin B stopped developing; Twin A doing perfectly! Graduated from RE @ 10 weeks
March 2018 - Baby Girl born via C/S due to pre-eclampsia -- strong and healthy!
TTC #2
January/Feb 2021 - Freeze-all IVF cycle
March 2021 - FET of 1 PGS normal female embryo. BFP! Beta #1 156, #2 472, #3 1241, #4 5268 EDD 12/5/21 - Christmas baby!
"When all is lost then all is found."
My first BFP also ended in a m/c so I totally understand how you feel -- thinking this is your time and then a bomb dropping on you. It took me 8 months to recover and move forward with IVF (it was a surprise natural BFP). Be kind to yourself. What feels like the end is often the beginning
Summer 2015 - no BFP yet, labs normal, referred to RE
Fall 2015 - Summer 2016 - Further testing all normal. 3 IUI's -- BFN. Recommended move to IVF. Planned cycle for fall 2016.
September 2016 - Surprise natural BFP. MMC @ 8 weeks. RE expressed confidence that we just needed the 'right' embryo.
Fall 2016 - Spring 2017 -- Break from TTC
June 2017 - Started IVF; egg retrieval for freeze all cycle. 9 mature eggs retrieved, 5 fertilized. 2 4BB embies on ice.
August 2017 - FET transfer both embies. BFP. Twin pregnancy confirmed by ultrasound. EDD 4/28/18
September 2017 - Twin B stopped developing; Twin A doing perfectly! Graduated from RE @ 10 weeks
March 2018 - Baby Girl born via C/S due to pre-eclampsia -- strong and healthy!
TTC #2
January/Feb 2021 - Freeze-all IVF cycle
March 2021 - FET of 1 PGS normal female embryo. BFP! Beta #1 156, #2 472, #3 1241, #4 5268 EDD 12/5/21 - Christmas baby!
"When all is lost then all is found."
2 normal embryos (recommended for transfer)
1 mosaic embryo with possible trisomy 18 (proceed with caution type embryo)
1 abnormal embryo with missing chromosome 16 (not recommended for transfer)
Out of the 2 normal ones, 1 looks good enough and 1 looks pretty bad and has about a 20% chance of implanting. The mosaic embryo has about 43% chance of it being abnormal and resulting in trisomy 18. Googling what trisomy 18 means led to scary information (such as Edwards disease, physical/intellectual defects, miscarriage, baby not living to 1st birthday, etc). We decided the risk is probably not worth it. The abnormal embryo we won't be transferring either. The normal one that looks bad and has a 20% implantation chance is also a big gamble. So in the end, we're really left with 1 viable embryo, although it's also not a guarantee it will implant. Now, if we didn't do PGS testing, we'd end up with a 3 out of 4 chance of miscarriage, birth defects, not implanting, etc. Both DH and I agreed that it's a huge emotional toll to begin with, plus the end result might not have led to good outcomes either 3 out of those 4 times (or even all 4 altogether). Although I wish we had more normal embryos, I'm glad we went forward with PGS testing to give us a better idea of what we have on hand.
TTC - since 2014
7 rounds of Clomid - BFN
IUI #1 - October 2015 - BFN
IUI #2 - November 2015 - BFN
IUI #3 - December 2015 - BFN
IVF #1 - March 2016
Retrieval #1 - April 2016
FET #1 - May 2016 - BFP!!! DS - Born January 2017
Trying for baby #2...
FET #2 - January 2018 - BFN
No more embryos left; switched to a new RE
IVF/Retrieval #2 - January 2019
IVF/Retrieval #3 - March 2019
FET #3 - April 2019 - BFP!!! - DD: Born December 2019
Trying for baby #3...
FET #4 - October 2021 - BFP!!! - Due June 2022
We took into consideration the concerns about its accuracy, but with our history and particularly after the most recent loss it was absolutely the best decision for us. But it's a very personal decision and I'm sure your RE will go through the options and pros-cons to help you decide what works best for you.
TTC - since 2014
7 rounds of Clomid - BFN
IUI #1 - October 2015 - BFN
IUI #2 - November 2015 - BFN
IUI #3 - December 2015 - BFN
IVF #1 - March 2016
Retrieval #1 - April 2016
FET #1 - May 2016 - BFP!!! DS - Born January 2017
Trying for baby #2...
FET #2 - January 2018 - BFN
No more embryos left; switched to a new RE
IVF/Retrieval #2 - January 2019
IVF/Retrieval #3 - March 2019
FET #3 - April 2019 - BFP!!! - DD: Born December 2019
Trying for baby #3...
FET #4 - October 2021 - BFP!!! - Due June 2022
**TW
With my first two IVF cycles and transfers, at age 40, we didn't do PGS. With our second transfer, I got pregnant; we thought everything was going well until we had the NIPT testing done. The baby had Trisomy 18 and we had to make the most difficult decision of our lives.
We will be starting another round next month, and though we seriously considered doing PGS this time, we won't be. It's a very personal decision, and hopefully your RE can help by answering all of your questions. Best of luck to you.
@zamora_spin so the poor prognosis "good" embryo is graded as 1BB, which is really low. My other good one is 4BB. Hence the reason my RE is saying it's likely not going to stick, but there's still a 20% chance.
@mackorori My RE did say trisomy 18, 21 (and maybe 9) are the most common that don't end in good outcomes if implanted. He's basically telling me not to use that embryo, I'm just puzzled why they would say I can transfer if I want to. DH and I decided we won't be using it.
TTC - since 2014
7 rounds of Clomid - BFN
IUI #1 - October 2015 - BFN
IUI #2 - November 2015 - BFN
IUI #3 - December 2015 - BFN
IVF #1 - March 2016
Retrieval #1 - April 2016
FET #1 - May 2016 - BFP!!! DS - Born January 2017
Trying for baby #2...
FET #2 - January 2018 - BFN
No more embryos left; switched to a new RE
IVF/Retrieval #2 - January 2019
IVF/Retrieval #3 - March 2019
FET #3 - April 2019 - BFP!!! - DD: Born December 2019
Trying for baby #3...
FET #4 - October 2021 - BFP!!! - Due June 2022