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Expert private fertility treatment with minimal wait times

At Horizon Fertility, we understand timing is crucial. 

 

With access to the best doctors and treatments throughout the UK and Europe, we are able to significantly reduce wait times for our clients, helping you to access the right care at the right time. 

 

Professor Andrew Drakeley can offer consultancy to couples throughout the UK via our online platform. From your first conversation with Andrew and results from the tests he recommends, our experts will be able to provide you with fertility treatment options.

 

Our four-step process minimises wait times, giving your family the right fertility treatment when you need it.

Our four step fertility treatment

1

Initial consultation

After making an initial enquiry with our team, we will set up a consultation either in-person or online. Simply fill out your medical history prior to your appointment. A GP referral letter is recommended but not compulsory.

2

Critical tests

Depending on our recommendations, a number of medical tests may need to be carried out, in one of our partner facilities local to you. The tests will be processed within 6-8 weeks of your initial consultation.

3

Follow-up appointment

Typically within three weeks of your tests, your results will be ready. We’ll set up a meeting with our consultant to discuss recommended treatment.

4

Fertility treatment

Depending on your results, we will match you with a partner fertility clinic in the UK or Europe that’s best suited to your particular needs. All of our partner clinics have been carefully chosen for their high success rates and minimal wait times to ensure you have the best possible chance of conceiving.

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Where will you receive fertility treatment?

Depending on your circumstances, the expert who can provide you with the best treatment isn’t local to you.

 

In order to give you the best chance of fertility, we’ve partnered with leading fertility centres across Spain, Cyprus, South Africa, USA and the UK to ensure you are in the best hands.

 

Some reasons why some UK couples seek treatment abroad:


Egg donor anonymity. In the UK, egg donors are identifiable and altruistic, whereas elsewhere they can remain anonymous. This can deter UK donors from volunteering, creating long waits. There are pros and cons to this issues and Prof. Drakeley can talk you through them.

Supporting couples with fertility
for nearly three decades

asset1 (1)

We attended the Fertility Clinic for treatment, under the supervision of Prof. Drakeley and his
team. Prof. Drakeley went above and beyond. Nothing was ever too much trouble, answering
emails swiftly, reassuring any doubts we had. He took a genuine interest in our progress.
Unfortunately, our pregnancy didn’t progress as expected due to unforeseen circumstances.
Prof. Drakeley took the time to ring us, to answer any questions we had and to offer support.
We also discussed future plans. We cannot thank him and his team enough.

Kelly McCormack

June 2022

asset1 (1)

Our precious baby girl has just had her first birthday and every day we appreciate how lucky
we are to have her in our lives. After years of traumatising fertility investigations, we
decided to go private and from the moment we met Prof. Drakeley we knew we were in the
best hands and felt a huge sense of relief. We quickly had a treatment plan put together and
were extremely lucky that our daughter was born following our first round of IVF treatment.
We would not be where we are now without the help of Prof. Drakeley and we will forever be
thankful. 

R.G.

June 2022

Transparent, diverse
fertility testing

Our experts are able to conduct a variety of medical tests to ensure you are getting the right treatment to maximise your chances of a successful pregnancy.

 

For couples who are struggling to conceive, typical medical tests include:

  • Sperm test
  • Ultrasound
  • Rubella, chlamydia & gonorrhoea
  • Anti-Mullerian hormone
  • Progesterone
  • Thyroid function
  • Prolactin
  • Vitamin D

For miscarriage, or implantation failure,medical tests include:

  • Viral screen (HIV, hepatitis C antibody and hepatitis B core antibody and surface antigen)
  • CMV, (cytomegalovirus)
  • Blood group
  • EndomeTrio, endometrial biopsy sent to Igenomix, Valencia, Spain
  • Immunoprofiling, endometrial biopsy sent to Matrice lab, Paris, France
  • Karyotype
  • HyCoSy fallopian tube patency
  • Examen sperm DNA fragmentation

 

For those who are requesting a surrogacy, additional screening, tests include:

  • HTLV,
  • Syphilis, chlamydia & gonorrhoea

Depending on the results, you may be recommended one or multiple treatment options. These include but are not limited to ovulation induction, IVF, or hysteroscopic polyp removal.

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Find out how much our
fertility and IVF
treatments cost

Our pricing is transparent, from the very start of your journey to the end.

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Frequently asked questions

Q

Why Horizon Fertility?

A

We have decades of experience treating couples with subfertility and miscarriage problems. We are up to date with the latest advances in tests and treatments and whilst evidenced based, are not bound by restrictions sometimes found in the NHS. An honest discussion on the pros and cons on all aspects of your care will be had at an early stage.

Q

How long should I wait before being referred / tested?

A

Typically 80% of fertile couples will have achieved a pregnancy after one year of unprotected intercourse. However you can found out how fertile you are at any age. This especially applies to older females, typically stated at >35 years of age.

Q

What are the most important factors in fertility?

A

Female factors include advancing age, a lack of ovulation (egg release), Fallopian tube damage and anatomical factors such as ovarian cysts. Male factors include reduced sperm quality: count (numbers), motility (how far and fast they swim) and morphology (shape of sperm head).

Q

How common is miscarriage?

A

Miscarriage is the commonest complication of pregnancy. The incidence increased with advancing female age and is often attributed to genetically abnormal embryos implanting. The likelihood of miscarriage is around 12% at age 30, 25% at 35, 35% at 40 and 48% for >42 years. Recurrent miscarriage is typically described as 3 or more miscarriages, but is often tested sooner e.g. 2 good quality blastocysts failing to succeed, late miscarriage (12-24 weeks) and fetal losses (heart beat seen on scan).

Q

What are my chances of success?

A

Different factors influence this. Healthy males produce better quality sperm. Younger, healthy females better eggs, which result in more, better quality embryos. Uterine factors are also important. So exploring factors at every step of the pathway is important and could be the marginal gain needed to succeed. Often persistence pays off as cumulative live birth rate increased with each treatment taken.

Q

What will happen at my first appointment?

A

After booking a consultation, you will be sent a history sheet (type of questionnaire) to complete. Once returned, you will see a staff member to advise which tests are needed next to give an informed decision. If you have already had some tests in the last year, providing these results will save time and cost.

Q

What will happen at my follow up?

A

A staff member will review your history, go over and interpret your test results, sometimes suggest specialist tests and form a management plan with you. This can either be conservative (try longer), medical (tablets) or surgical e.g. hysteroscopy (telescope into the uterus) or laparoscopy (telescope into the abdomen). These can either be arranged at private hospitals or a relevant referral letter to your local hospital for NHS listing are both possible.

Q

Why are these tests relevant?

A

Understanding what is stopping you conceive or carry a pregnancy successfully is key to our management approach.

Q

What treatments are available?

A

Starting with health advice, dietary improvements, food supplements, oral ovulation induction (help you release eggs), cycle monitoring for artificial insemination, assisted conception (IVF/ICSI), egg or sperm donation, surrogacy work up.

Q

Why would I need donor eggs or sperm?

A

If a woman is not producing her own eggs, the oocyte yield in IVF is low or results in a few poor quality embryos, then egg donation is often beneficial. The live birth rate at 42 is 10%, whereas at 30 with donor eggs it is 50%. Donor sperm is needed for single women, same sex females or when the male partner is not producing his own sperm.

Q

What are the pros and cons of treatment abroad?

A

In the UK, donors of eggs, sperm and embryos are identifiable. There is a central registry of who has donated to who? If a child knows they are conceived via donation, they have the right when they are 18 to contact the HFEA to ask who their biological parents are? Donors in the UK cannot be paid, but can be re-imbursed reasonable expenses, which is capped at £750. In other countries such as Spain, donors are anonymous and retain the right to this. This means that children and parents of donor conceived children cannot track the biological sperm or egg provider. Donors can be paid. As such waiting times abroad are often far shorter than the UK.

Q

What is the HFEA?

A

HFEA stands for the Human Fertilisation and Embryology Authority and is the regulator of fertility clinics in the UK. You need an HFEA licence to provide treatments such as artificial insemination and in vitro fertilisation. A satellite clinic needs to be named on a clinics HFEA licence to conduct parts of such treatments.

Q

Where are we based and which are our partner clinics?

A

We are based in Liverpool, but due to our set up are ideally placed to help couples across the UK for fertility and miscarriage testing and early treatment advice. We have satellite arrangements for more advanced treatments with HFEA licensed clinics in Liverpool, Manchester and London, with links for egg donation in Spain and Cyprus and when required Greece, USA, Mexico and South Africa, given links in the field of reproductive medicine over many years.

Q

When should I stop?

A

You should stop when you know you have tried your best and have nothing left to give. This is a difficult topic but one that are staff are used to having and are not afraid to be upfront and honest with you. Sometimes options that you have not considered come up.

Q

What future developments are on the horizon?

A

Automation of the fertility process is coming soon. This can mean speedier work up, consistent decision making, using artificial intelligence and deep machine learning to help choose the best eggs, sperm and embryos. Automation of the ICSI process (sperm injection). Robotic cryopreservation (freezing). These advances should make treatment more accessible and decrease costs, whilst making the process more efficient. See www.ivf20.ai for more information. Work is underway for a lab in a boxfor freezing eggs (Spain) and lab in a van(USA), where the clinical team comes to you. Home ultrasound for cycle monitoring will come soon. It has been stated that artificial eggs from somatic (skin or cheek) cells could be available in the next 10 years. How that affects the significant impact on female age remains to be seen. There is a lot going on!

Q

I live a considerable distance from you, is that a problem?

A

A virtual option is entirely feasible for couples living outside the North West of England when travel is an issue.

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Get started with your fertility treatment

Take the first step and book your initial consultation with Professor Andrew Drakeley.