Anonymous wrote:Thanks for this post! I'm glad that you finally have the success that you worked so hard for.
I'll be crass and cut right to the bottom line. I'm a federal employee and I've heard CCRM does not take United MDIPA. Did insurance cover any of your costs? Including travel, lodging, etc., how much do you think you spent out of pocket per fresh cycle?
Anonymous wrote:OP: I did do 6 cycles at CCRM. One of those was cancelled because I wasn't responding and one of those cycles I went to retrieval and despite having three follicles there were no eggs. I never got more than five eggs on any one cycle except my very first locally and I was younger then. Like you, almost all of my eggs fertilized each cycle.
All of the cycles were high doses of follistim/gonal f with high doses of menopur as well. I also had lupron and dexamethasone for every cycle. The amounts and timing were tweaked each time. I think they tried one cycle with ganerelix but that was the cancelled cycle and we didn't do that again. I also did priming for one month before each cycle with progesterone, estrogen and testosterone. So I was constantly on meds except for a week or two after each retrieval.
The way they do it at CCRM for most patients, I think, is that you do as many cycles as you want freezing at the day one or day two stage (you decide). You decide when you want to stop collecting embryos and we decided to stop at 12. According to their statistics for an "average" patient half of the embryos won't make it to day 5 then only half will be normal and only half will implant. I think this was for patients 38-40. Schoolcraft said to me though, he didn't really know what my odds were because they don't really have enough data for patients with numbers as bad as mine were. (amy .22, fsh 20). I was very lucky to have two at the end.
Once you decide you've done enough they grow everything out to day 5 and then freeze again do the CCS testing and then freeze again so you can plan for the timing of the transfer.
I don't know if it is worth it to you to try CCRM, but the reason I went there was because I didn't want to go through more cycles without knowing whether I was doing this for nothing - like if all the embryos were chromosomal abnormal I could move on knowing I did everything I could.
Knowing was really, really important to me. All I can say is that I wish I had gone there sooner, even if the outcome were negative the peace of mind would have been worth it.