This is Infertility is a bi-weekly podcast where we fuse narrative storytelling with experience and science to give you a new perspective on what it’s really like to go through a family building journey. Each episode dives into the emotional, physical, and financial burdens carried by those who experience infertility on their path to parenthood. Be it IVF, IUI, egg freezing, surrogacy, adoption, etc., the path is never the same and it can be long, painful, and lonely. It’s our mission to give those struggling a platform to be heard, a community connection, and an opportunity to raise awareness of the 1 in 6 who, for many reasons, struggle with infertility.
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This is Infertility

Episode 160: Male-Factor Infertility: IVF & the Unexpected

Today’s guest, Lizzy Colas, went into her marriage knowing she would likely need IVF to have a baby since her partner was diagnosed with male-factor infertility. What the couple didn’t know was how frustrating this process would be. Lizzy shares how they were able to navigate their journey, the support from their loved ones, and why they advocated for themselves throughout the entire process. Lizzy makes a few things clear – the impact of having access to a comprehensive family building benefit and how a doctor can make all the difference.  

Dr. Joseph Alukal, a reproductive urologist, joins to explain the complexities and realities of male factor infertility. 

Progyny also hosted a webinar dedicated to male fertility. To watch it on-demand, click here. 

Guest: Lizzy Colas, Progyny Member, and Dr. Joseph Alukal, Columbia University Irving Medical Center

Host: Dan Bulger, Progyny

For more information, visit Progyny’s Podcast page and Progyny’s Education page for more resources. Be sure to follow us on Instagram, @ThisisInfertilityPodcast and use the #ThisisInfertility. Have a question, comment, or want to share your story? Email us at thisisinfertility@progyny.com.

Here are some highlights from this episode:

The Male Factor

02:27 — 12:01

Lizzy Colas: We actually started with IVF right off the bat, my husband was super open with me about the fact that we would face infertility challenges from the beginning. So, we always knew that we would need medical intervention, but I don’t think either of us realized how challenging it would actually be.

Dan Bulger: He was born without a vas deferens. And this brings us to our second special guest of the episode, Dr. Joseph Alukal from Columbia University Irving Medical Center.

Dr. Joseph Alukal: The vas deferens is a tube that colloquially, people are going to know best because it’s what gets snipped when a person has a vasectomy. It carries sperm from the testicles deep into the pelvis to the base of the penis and the prostate. So now instead, imagine a patient who was born without that tubing. And actually, the most common medical condition that this is associated with is cystic fibrosis or cystic fibrosis mutation carriers.

The next question is, “what are we going to do about it?” Couples can be really disheartened to find out that the male partner doesn’t have any sperm. But I’ve tried to be encouraging to these people because almost always there are numerous sperm to be found. They just have to be taken out of the testicle with surgery. We can actually do less invasive procedures to try and find sperm for the reproductive endocrinologist to work with. Sometimes those procedures can be as quick and easily accomplished as a couple of needle sticks to numb the patient up in the office, and then a third needle stick to actually take sperm out of the out of the testes. So hopefully, when that works like that the patient only needs to have this procedure one.

IVF is the only way forward, IUI is not an option. What I think people need to plan on having happen is they’ll do an IVF cycle with ICSI, where a technician takes individual sperm and injects them into an egg one at a time. And so, with that, you know the success rates are really high.

Don’t Bear it Alone

12:02 — 16:49

Lizzy Colas: We did three egg retrievals with the clinic. And we got one embryo of fair quality. So, at that point, they basically told us, we couldn’t have kids. We had coverage under my employer. And their benefit was that they covered $15,000 for infertility, which was a max lifetime value. And after that we had to pay out of pocket. We ended up getting like 50 eggs per egg retrieval. And then by the time we got to genetic testing our embryos we’d usually have two left and usually those would, you know, they would call us, and they would say neither of them were genetically viable.

And after the first year, and after we had gone through this once or twice, we realized that it was just too much of a burden to bear on our own. So, we came out about it on Facebook. And I remember just writing the post, and sitting on it for about five minutes before I actually posted our story. And then I didn’t check Facebook for a while. And my husband was reading it and came to me and said, “Oh, my goodness, you cannot imagine the most amazing things people are commenting.” So, we got so much support from our friends and family through that. And it was just such a surprise, I think especially because IVF is so controversial, I wasn’t sure what people were going to say to us. But we just couldn’t bear the burden on our own anymore. We were able to find a wonderful support network through our friends and our families, and also, our colleagues once we came out about it that work as well.

Quality Care

17:28 — 23:50

Lizzy Colas: We switched clinics for two reasons. One was because my husband got a job at Facebook, which uses Progyny for fertility benefits, the clinic we were using at the time was not covered under Progyny

Dan Bulger: Quality differs depending where you go, and Progyny only partners with doctors and clinics that reach our standards of care. If you are at a Progyny clinic, then you can be confident that you’re at a modern clinic that’s practicing today’s best practices. So, whether you have the benefit or not, you can take advantage of this fact by using our finding provider tool. Lindsay found out that her doctor wasn’t in network, well, as she said, that was actually a blessing. It led to more research where she discovered that this clinic was below average and stats and was not recommended upon review.

Lizzy Colas: I think the fact that Progyny has clearly done their due diligence on who should be in their network and who shouldn’t be was a huge win for us. We’ve been super happy with our clinic, we’ve had six embryo transfers with them, one of which resulted in our daughter. The doctors, embryologists, nurses, and even the front desk staff just celebrated with us when things go well, and cry with us when things don’t go well. They’re like family to us. So, I think we made the right decision. Have a conversation with the doctors before you go and just make sure that you feel like you can trust them that you feel like you’re getting the explanations that you need. And that they’re going to be your partner and work with you through this entire process. Because you’re going to see them a lot. And you want to feel like a human as much as you can throughout this entire process.

I was able to remain optimistic for every transfer, surprisingly. But I think for me, for every transfer, part of that process is getting myself into the right mental state and emotional state and just being optimistic and trying to give each embryo the best chance they can have.

Dan Bulger

Host

Dan Bulger
Producer at Progyny

Dan has been in the healthcare industry for the past ten plus years as a multimedia content producer. Better known as ‘Video Dan’ he has interviewed numerous doctors, patients and other experts in the world of fertility. He’s also the producer for this podcast, This is Infertility and the producer behind the Progyny YouTube Channel which features interviews with dozens of the nation’s leading fertility specialists. On a personal note Dan’s parents started fostering kids when he was four years old, and he considers himself a proud older brother to over 100 foster children.

Lizzy Colas

Guest

Lizzy Colas
Progyny Member

Lizzy is a program manager in the localization industry. She lives with her husband and daughter, and loves baking with her daughter, spending time with friends, and doing yoga. She has had three egg retrievals, seven embryo transfers, and six pregnancies since 2016 and is grateful for the support of her family, friends, and company through offering Progyny benefits.

Dr. Joe Alukal

Guest

Dr. Joseph Alukal
Columbia University Irving Medical Center

Dr. Joseph P. Alukal is The Andrew Sabin Family Foundation Associate Professor in the Department of Urology; he is also Director of Men’s Health at Columbia/NewYork-Presbyterian and Fellowship Director in Andrology/Male Reproductive Health.

Dr. Alukal currently serves at Columbia in a number of roles including service on the Columbia Faculty Network on Anti-Bias as Part of Action Collaborative to the National Academy of Science, Engineering, and Medicine. As well, he is the Clinical Director for the NYP Reproductive Tissue Bank, in addition to serving on the NYP Tissue Bank Medical Advisory Committee.

He maintains a busy clinical practice in men’s health, male infertility, male sexual dysfunction, and general urology and has been named to Castle Connolly’s Top Doctors New York Metro Area every year since 2016. He is currently named to New York Magazine’s Top Doctors 2021. He maintains extensive clinical collaborative relationships with numerous IVF centers, primary care, and cardiology practices in and around the New York City area.

Music From This Episode:

Artist: Andy G Cohen
Track: A Perceptible Shift
URL: https://freemusicarchive.org/

Artist: Jahzzar
Track: Bloom
URL: https://freemusicarchive.org/

Track: Sleepin
URL: https://freemusicarchive.org/

Track: MainSquare
URL: https://freemusicarchive.org/