THISDAY

For Delayed Motherhood, Freeze Your Eggs, Abayomi Tells Women

- Martins Ifijeh

The Managing Director, Nordica Fertility Centre, Dr. Abayomi Ajayi, has advised women having delayed fertility, delayed motherhood or are still waiting for a lifetime partner, to have their eggs frozen,

He said women who want the chance to conceive in the future but are not ready due to several factors, should grasp the opportunit­y to get their eggs iced, as this will help in addressing infertilit­y issues later in life.

He said egg freezing procedure allows women to use eggs from a younger version of themselves to conceive and have their own biological children.

This involves extraction, freezing and storage of the eggs of a woman of reproducti­ve age as a method to preserve her reproducti­ve potential.

Speaking at a press conference in Lagos recently, the fertility expert said a woman’s chances of conceiving naturally falls as she gets older because the quality and number of her eggs drop.

He said: “It is best for a woman to freeze her eggs by the time she is 35 years old to ensure the highest rate of success. Babies produced with frozen eggs are believed to be as normal as babies born with fresh eggs.

“We have had patients since the procedure was set up. Egg freezing for these women has been successful. Some women diagnosed with cancer opt for freezing their eggs as a safeguard in case their fertility is affected by the cancer or in the course of treatment.”

But caution has been called for over “social egg freezing,” by the Royal College of Obstetrici­ans and Gynaecolog­ists (RCOG).

In its latest report, it noted that while egg freezing has the potential to offer a future family to some women, this should not detract from the social, economic and political issues that contribute to women’s use of the technology in the first place.

Ajayi said concern of the RCOG was to draw attention to certain aspects to ensure maximum benefit from the procedure.

“The age at which eggs are frozen obviously makes a difference. We mostly get patients above 35 years of age, but for freezing to be useful, it should be done when the woman is below 35 when she still has healthy, high-quality eggs. The chances of success will likely lessen when women are older.

“We started cryopreser­vation at Nordica Lagos when we were having more embryos than we could use. It was to preserve the excess embryos. We now know we can freeze eggs and the importance of cryopreser­vation is better appreciate­d.

“The process used is fast freezing called vitrificat­ion that has a high survival rate of about 90 per cent for eggs and embryos. We want to let people know that it is possible to store their eggs for later use, who should freeze their eggs and for how long?”

Ajayi said the challenge is that most people that are coming for egg freezing are those that should have done it 10 years ago.

“From experience at Nordica, those making enquiries about egg freezing are not the ones that will ultimately benefit and that is why the RCOG is calling for caution. If you must freeze, know what the technology entails.

“The success rate of when the egg is thawed is different from the success rate of the egg becoming a baby. The success rate for the egg to come alive when thawed and success rate of the thawed egg becoming a baby is the success rate of the age group of the woman whose egg was frozen.”

Ajayi remarked that it is the age at which the eggs are frozen that determines the efficacy of the eggs when they are thawed.

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