For female patients who have no viable eggs at all, or male patients who
have no sperm, the option of egg or sperm donation offers a chance to still
have a child of their own.
Egg donation
Because of the intense hormone treatment required to collect eggs, egg donation
is a serious step for anyone to consider. Sometimes donors come from the community
- women who have a family of their own and wish to share that joy with another.
More often, the donor is known to the recipient - a friend, sister, or cousin.
In either case, Sydney IVF requires that the donor and recipient couple undergo
a process of implications counselling before the procedure begins.
The process begins by synchronising the menstrual cycles of the donor and
recipient. The donor then undergoes a cycle of ovarian stimulation with the
aim of producing as many eggs as possible. As the donor reaches the point
of ovulation, the recipient begins taking estrogen and progesterone to prepare
the lining of her uterus (similar to a frozen cycle).
The eggs are collected and fertilised with sperm from the recipients partner.
Resulting embryos are observed and the best chosen for transfer. Any other
viable embryos are frozen for later attempts.
Sperm donation
Sydney IVF does not accept anonymous sperm donors. All donors must be known
to the recipients; whether you've known them all your life or recruited
them through a newspaper advertisement is not important - they just
can't be anonymous. This is because Sydney IVF believe that everyone
has the right to know their genetic heritage, and maintaining anonymity
for donors prevents this.
Single women and lesbian couples
Sydney IVF does not refuse treatment to women because of marital status
or sexual orientation. Single women and lesbian couples are welcome and treated
with care and respect.
Because of our policy of not accepting anonymous sperm donors, we require
that single women and lesbian couples who come to us for treatment bring with
them their own sperm donor.
Quarantine
Eggs and sperm, like most human tissues, can carry diseases. Donors should
be tested for disease at the time of donation. A negative test is not conclusive,
as some diseases take many months to show up on blood tests. Therefore, sperm
and fertilised eggs should be held in cryo-storage for six months. At the
end of that time, the donor should be retested. If that test proves negative,
the gametes are considered disease-free.
Some recipients choose to waive the quarantine period for eggs. In this
case, Sydney IVF takes no responsibility for any diseases contracted by the
recipient from the transferred eggs.
By law, however, we must quarantine donated sperm for six months before
using it to fertilise eggs.
Legal considerations
Firstly, it should be noted that it is illegal in Australia to sell sperm
or eggs (or any human tissue). Couples desperate for a child have been known
to fall victim to unscrupulous people offering to sell eggs. While it is considered
normal for recipients to cover their donor's expenses, if anyone you approach
asks for payment beyond expenses, they should be avoided.
The second important point is about parentage. The law considers a woman
who gives birth to a child to be the mother of that child. It further considers
the partner of that woman to be the father of the child. Donors can be assured
that they will be under no legal or financial obligation to the child, though
Sydney IVF encourages recipients to include the donor in the child's life.