Healthy twin girls -- Elizabeth and McKinney Caudill -- are the first babies in Minnesota to be born from eggs that were frozen and then thawed before being fertilized in a petri dish.
Doctors at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester who treated the parents are now offering egg freezing as an option for those with a good reason to use it.
Egg freezing has growing appeal as a way to preserve fertility for women, or, as in the case of the twins' parents, to avoid the wrenching decision of what to do with excess frozen embryos that will never become children. While frozen embryos remain by far the most common and successful choice for use in vitro fertilization (IVF), egg-freezing technology is rapidly improving.
Mayo's is just one of many IVF clinics nationally trying to improve success rates for frozen eggs to cater to what many experts say is an enormous market. So far, only 200 to 300 babies have been born from frozen eggs worldwide. But with millions of women delaying child bearing and egg freezing so far the only way to bring a woman's biological clock to a halt, experts say the technology could revolutionize women's reproductive lives as much as the birth control pill did 40 years ago -- for those who can afford it.
"For women who are sure they are going to go through menopause from cancer treatments, or for women in their mid-30s who don't see a partner on the horizon, there really aren't other options," said Dr. Elizabeth Ginsberg, president-elect of the Society for Assisted Reproductive Technology (SART) and a fertility doctor in Boston.
The embryo dilemma
The twins' parents, Ceresa and Jonathan Caudill, were reluctant to freeze embryos if those not used in IVF might be destroyed. It's a concern Dr. Charles Coddington, head of Mayo's fertility clinic, hears from many of his patients.
The Caudills started IVF in the fall of 2006, a few years after the birth of their son, Jonathan Jr., now 5. In IVF, the woman's ovaries are stimulated with powerful fertility drugs to produce a dozen or more eggs in one cycle. The eggs are surgically removed and then fertilized by sperm in a petri dish. Doctors implant one or more of the resulting embryos in her uterus and freeze others to be used at a later time.