LifeQuest Launches Egg Freezing Program for Fertility Preservation
As revolutionary as the birth control pill, egg freezing, an assisted reproductive technology, is giving younger women an opportunity to slow the ticking of their biological clocks.  For instance, a healthy 29 year-old-woman knows she wants to have a biological family; but she has not yet met her life partner, and she is dedicated to building a career. Still, she worries about the statistics that tell her infertility could be an issue, especially as women delay pregnancy. Now, egg freezing provides an opportunity for her to preserve her eggs at the peak of her fertility.

Beginning March 2010, with the launch of HERS (Human Eggs for Reproductive Safekeeping), LifeQuest Centre for Reproductive Medicine became the first fertility centre in Toronto to offer an elective egg freezing program for fertility preservation. Full information about the program is available on the website: www.lifequesteggfreezing.com.

Egg freezing is a new innovation in the field of Assisted Reproductive Technologies. For the past 20 years, it has been possible to freeze embryos, and thousands of babies have been born around the world. Until recently, the technology for freezing unfertilized eggs (oocytes) has not proven reliable, and has resulted in very few pregnancies. However advances in research and new techniques have made egg freezing a viable option for healthy young women.

LifeQuest has been freezing eggs for five years, using a modification of the ‘slow freezing’ method first reported by 2002 by Italian researchers. The first baby in Canada using this slow freezing method was born to a LifeQuest couple in 2004. Since then, LifeQuest has successfully frozen, stored, and later thawed and fertilized human eggs, with subsequent live births.

A woman’s age at the time of her egg collection is the biggest determinant of a successful outcome to egg freezing, and any subsequent chance of pregnancy and live birth. The ideal time to freeze a woman’s eggs is in her 20’s or early 30’s. After the age of 37, both the quantity and quality of eggs decline rapidly. LifeQuest offers elective egg freezing to women between the ages of 19 and 36.

Last Updated on Tuesday, 27 April 2010 08:45