we are very proud of our live-birth success rates
Successful Outcomes
advanced fertility care
We are extremely proud of our excellent success rates.
Our consistently high success rates set our fertility practice apart from the rest.
We STRONGLY encourage all patients to research success rates through SART and the CDC to make an educated decision regarding your care.
We are confident that after you see the facts, you will then come back to us for your care.
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Our Success Rates
Understanding Success Rates Tables
The tables below reflect the success rates for patients who had their initial new patient visit at Advanced Fertility Care within the respective years noted. The patient may have undergone treatment elsewhere, but they were new to Advanced Fertility Care during the reporting year. The percentages highlighted can be translated as, “If I choose to undergo IVF at Advanced Fertility Care, what chance do I have of actually becoming pregnant and having a child, and how many fresh egg retrieval cycles and frozen embryo transfers will it take me to do so.”
Why are the statistics 2-3 years old?
The Society of Assisted Reproductive Technology (SART) is the organization responsible for tabulating statistics for every participating fertility center in the country. Due to the nature of the statistics being kept, live birth outcome data will always be at least 10 months delayed and it usually takes up to 3 months for clinics to report this data to SART and additional 6 months for SART to compile, verify, and tabulate these results before releasing them to the general public. In addition, since IVF cycles and subsequent Frozen Embryo Transfer cycles may span more than one year, this information needs to be provided to SART for consideration. Therefore, in most cases, the release of finalized data for a given collection year will usually be approximately 2-3 years delayed. Click this link to view our clinic’s results on the SART website!
This Clinic Summary Report snapshot is from the most current finalized data (2019) that is available on the SART website. This will be updated once all finalized data is available and published for the next year.
SART and CDC Reporting: Advanced Fertility Care as well as the majority of reputable fertility clinics have elected to be members of the Society for Assisted Reproductive Technology (SART) and have voluntarily chosen to adhere to SART’s guidelines and recommendations for appropriate fertility care. By being members of SART, fertility centers are required to report their IVF success rates to SART for verification and potential audit every year and these are available to the public. However, fertility centers that do not belong to SART are still required to report their success rates annually to the Center for Disease Control (CDC) in accordance with the Fertility Clinic Success Rates Act.
We encourage all our patients to please visit the SART website for further information and to see national summary data.
Important Note: A comparison of clinic success rates may not be meaningful because patient medical characteristics, treatment approaches and entrance criteria for ART may vary from clinic to clinic.
SART and CDC Reporting: Advanced Fertility Care as well as the majority of reputable fertility clinics have elected to be members of the Society for Assisted Reproductive Technology (SART) and have voluntarily chosen to adhere to SART’s guidelines and recommendations for appropriate fertility care. By being members of SART, fertility centers are required to report their IVF success rates to SART for verification and potential audit every year and these are available to the public. However, fertility centers that do not belong to SART are still required to report their success rates annually to the Center for Disease Control (CDC) in accordance with the Fertility Clinic Success Rates Act.
We encourage all our patients to please visit the SART website for further information and to see national summary data.
Important Note: A comparison of clinic success rates may not be meaningful because patient medical characteristics, treatment approaches and entrance criteria for ART may vary from clinic to clinic.
Live Births Per Intended Egg Retrieval (All Embryo Transfers)
Cumulative Data: Here is a compilation of data from our clinic over many years and serves as a summary of live birth rates per intended egg retrieval (you start an IVF cycle – whether you actually end up having an egg retrieval or embryo transfer or not, so it factors in those whose cycles get canceled or don’t have any embryos available for transfer after their retrieval) and a summary of live birth rates for every new patient who starts an IVF cycle in our clinic in the years listed (which includes all of the egg retrievals and embryo transfers from that new patient in those years). Having multiyear data compiled in one spot gives a possibly more complete view of success rates as there can be fluctuations from year to year in success rates, especially when looking at patient groups that have small numbers in any one year. All data presented is for patients using their own eggs while undergoing treatment.