Should you freeze your eggs? What you need to know

Want to freeze your eggs so you can delay motherhood? 

Singer Rita Ora revealed on an Australian television program that she made the decision to freeze her eggs in her early 20s.

The 26-year-old singer was talking to Aussie TV host David Koch when she revealed the decision came about after explaining to her doctor how she had ‘always wanted a big family.’

‘He said “you are healthy now and it would be great, why not put them away and then you never have to worry about it again?”‘ she said.

Ora’s announcement promotes the potential benefits of freezing your eggs earlier, rather than waiting and potentially being unable to conceive later on.

 

Rita Ora, 26, revealed on Australian TV that she froze her eggs when she was 22

The British singer (pictured on November 16) said she wanted to have her eggs at their best and can decide what to do with them later. She's one of many young women doing it

The British singer (pictured on November 16) said she wanted to have her eggs at their best and can decide what to do with them later. She’s one of many young women doing it

Dr Helen O’Neill, of University College London, said: ‘The earlier you freeze your eggs the better. The benefits (of egg freezing) are that you are taking your fertility into your own hands. If you’re checked and you have a low fertility, it’s best to act early.’

In the UK, the numbers of women choosing to freeze their eggs have soared since 2001. During that time, a mere 29 British women froze their eggs but in 2014 that number had soared to 816 women.

That figure is closer to 5,000 in the states. By 2018, around 76,000 women worldwide will be freezing their eggs, according to estimates by fertility marketer EggBanxx.

But what exactly happens during the egg-freezing process? Fertility expert Professor Geeta Nargund explains the process, risks and costs 

How are the eggs frozen?

Today, we have a technique called egg vitrification which is also called ‘flash freezing’ which can really preserve the egg’s quality. It’s been a game changer in egg freezing because it can preserve up to 80 per cent of the egg’s quality where in the past some 50 per cent might have been lost through older freezing techniques.

Is there an optimum age for egg freezing?

Don’t leave it until after 35 because the age of the egg determines the success of egg freezing. But freezing your eggs is not a guarantee of a baby – we can’t erase the effects of age on a woman’s eggs.

What are the risks?

You will need to take drugs to stimulate your ovaries to produce more eggs than usual and this can in rare cases lead to ovarian hyperstimulation syndrome which can lead to illness, severe pain and even death.

Thankfully, today’s methods for drug stimulation are much milder so make sure you ask your doctors questions about using low ovarian stimulating drugs to ensure your risk of this stays low. 

The egg collection process can come with a low risk of vaginal bleeding and internal injury.

What are the costs?

In the UK, women can pay between £3,000 and £4,000 for egg collection, scans, freezing and two years of storage. 

In the US, it costs around $10-12,000 per cycle to retrieve the eggs, plus $4,000 for the hormones to take before the collection, and $500-a-year to store the eggs.   

Then, when you thaw the eggs there will be additional costs to have fertility treatment. 

If you’re using donor sperm you will need to source donor sperm at a cost of around £650 or $780 an ampule of sperm and use a process called Intra-Cytoplasmic Sperm Injection (ICSI) in which your eggs will be injected with a single sperm and costs around £1,000 or $1,200. 

Then you will need an embryo transfer procedure in which an embryo is put back into your womb (which will hopefully turn unto a pregnancy) which costs about £950, or $4,600.

  • Looking for more information about what happens inside fertility clinics? Watch this video which shows the process inside the IVI fertility clinic in Madrid.

This article was originally published by Healthista 

Read more at DailyMail.co.uk