Female Age, Fertility and Infertility

Posted on September 11, 2020 by Inception Fertility

Female age is important when considering probability for getting pregnant. Increasedinfertilityrates with aging are well documented and apparent in our society.

The real issue isegg quantity and quality- which translates intoembryo qualityafter fertilization.

As women wait longer to have children, more couples have fertility problems due to declining egg quality, and other issues that are more common in older women.

Many couples end up needing advanced treatments such asIVF, in vitro fertilizationto overcome this age-related decline.

Women's liberation brings many advantages to women. However, as women delay childbearing, society has not educated us about this fertility decline.

Many couples learn too late about the impact of age

If they tried sooner to have a baby, good "old-fashioned sex" could have built the family. The American Society for Reproductive Medicine said it well:


  • "As women delay childbearing, there is now an unrealistic expectation that medical science can undo the effects of aging"


We do our best to overcome advancing age with fertility treatments such as IVF. However, egg quality and quantity are both significant limiting factors. Women should be educated on the decline in fertility as well as the success rates of assisted reproduction with age.

Learn aboutegg freezing for fertility preservation

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[expand title="Individuals vs. Populations" tag="h4" elwraptag="div" elwrapclass="blackground" trigclass="text-white colomat-spacing" targclass="text-white blackground-padding" expanded="true"]Every individual and couple is unique and could be more fertile or less fertile as compared to the average for their age. Some 30 year olds already have significant egg quality and/or quantity issues and some 43 year olds are still fertile.

There are also no guarantees that an individual woman will have a smooth drop in her fertility potential as she ages. Although rare, it is possible to have a rapid decline in egg quantity or quality as early as the teens or twenties.[/expand]

[expand title="Male Age and Fertility" tag="h4" elwraptag="div" elwrapclass="blackground" trigclass="text-white colomat-spacing" targclass="text-white blackground-padding" expanded="true"]The age of the male partner does not appear to matter much when it comes to fertility. Reasons for this include:

  • All of a woman's eggs are present at birth. They can not divide or be "resupplied", whereas sperm are produced constantly after puberty in men.

  • Eggs age over time, while new sperm are constantly coming off the production line.

  • Spermfrom older men can have a reduced fertilizing potential compared to younger men. However, this tends to be "all or none". If the sperm can fertilize eggs - we usually don't see poor embryo quality due to reduced sperm quality.

  • Sometimes older men have less interest in frequent intercourse, which can be a factor.


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[expand title="Female Age - Egg Issues" tag="h4" elwraptag="div" elwrapclass="blackground" trigclass="text-white colomat-spacing" targclass="text-white blackground-padding" expanded="true"]

  • Successful pregnancy outcome is very much related to female age - when using the woman's own eggs.

  • When donor eggs are being used, the age of the egg donor is the important factor.

  • With egg donation, the age of the recipient woman has very little impact on the chance for successful pregnancy.

  • Therefore, the age of the egg is very important, but the age of the uterus is not.

  • Much of the problem is due to anincreased percentage of chromosomally abnormal eggs with aging

  • The higher percentage of chromosomally abnormal eggs in older women also explains the progressive increase in miscarriage rates with age: 13% in women < 35 years old to 54% in women 44 years old.

  • Preimplantation genetic testing for aneuploidy (PGT-A)is a valuable tool to minimize the miscarriage rates.


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See the graph below for more on aging and fertility potential

The graph below is from the 2015 ART Success Rates report from the CDC, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, a US government agency. This report used national data from 464 clinics and about 232,000 IVF cycles.

Links to the CDC and SART IVF success rate reports

  • The green line shows IVF success rates by age using the infertile woman's eggs

  • The blue line shows IVF data using donor eggs





  • The chart shows falling success rates with increasing age starting at about age 30

  • Infertility increases with age so the curve gets steeper (egg quantity and quality drops faster) from about age 37

  • If using eggs over age 44 with IVF the chance to have a baby is about 1% per attempt

  • There is little or no drop in pregnancy rates by age of the recipient using donor eggs

  • Bottom line - the age of the egg matters, but the age of the uterus does not

  • These age and fertility statistics are for IVF, but the drop in fertility with aging in the general population is very similar.






[expand title="Statistics on Female Age and Declining Fertility" tag="h4" elwraptag="div" elwrapclass="blackground" trigclass="text-white colomat-spacing" targclass="text-white blackground-padding"]

[/expand]

[expand title="A 1957 Study of Fertility Rate by Age in Women" tag="h4" elwraptag="div" elwrapclass="blackground" trigclass="text-white colomat-spacing" targclass="text-white blackground-padding"]The study was on a large population that never used birth control. The investigators measured the relationship between the age of the female partner and fertility. Infertility rates are now higher in the general population than for the population in this study from the 1950s.

This study found:

  • By age 30, 7% of couples were infertile

  • By age 35, 11% of couples were infertile

  • By age 40, 33% of couples were infertile

  • At age 45, 87% of couples were infertile


Reference: Tietze C: Reproductive span and rate of conception among Hutterite women. Fertility and Sterility 1957;8:89-97.
[/expand]

[expand title="Importance of Egg Quality to Pregnancy Outcome" tag="h4" elwraptag="div" elwrapclass="blackground" trigclass="text-white colomat-spacing" targclass="text-white blackground-padding"]Poor egg quality results in poorembryo quality, which reduces the chances for becoming pregnant and having a successful outcome.

Female Age and Egg Quality

 

Age is one issue, but the real fertility issue is egg quality and quantity and not the number in a woman's age. Egg quantity and quality in an individual woman can be average for her age, better than average, or worse than average. We know that egg quantity and quality declines in the mid to late 30s and falls faster in the late thirties and early 40s.

Fertility and "Egg Tests"

 

The following ovarian reserve screening tests are used by fertility specialists to predict the "remaining egg supply" and the ability (reserve) of the ovaries to respond to stimulation with drugs. These tests are helpful. However, they predict thequantityof eggs remaining - rather than thequalityof those eggs.

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Available Treatment for Age Related Fertility Problems: In Vitro Fertilization


 

Many fertility doctors recommend that women over about 38 that are infertile should have aggressive fertility treatments and proceed to in vitro fertilization sooner - before fertility potential is lost.

Age Limits for In Vitro Fertilization

All clinics have an upper age limit after which they will not do IVF with the woman's own eggs. Most IVF centers will attempt IVF using the female partner's eggs until about age 43-45.

More About IVF Over Age 40 and IVF Age Limits


A dark, low quality egg with an irregular shape from a 41 year old
The egg is the ovoid structure in the center surrounded by hundreds of ovarian cumulus cells
More IVF egg and embryo pictures

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