Should I focus on egg quality before my next retrieval?

Direct Answer

Should I focus on improving my egg quality before my next retrieval, or is that wishful thinking at my age? It is not wishful thinking. The non-age factors that determine egg quality, mitochondrial function, oxidative stress, and the nutritional and hormonal follicular environment, remain addressable at every age. Whether to invest the 90-day window before your next retrieval in egg quality work depends on your specific clinical picture and how much time is available.

Heather Kish

Heather Kish

Founder, Harvest Health with Heather · Creator, The Egg Awakening™

Best Move

If your last cycle showed poor fertilization, early embryo arrest, or a high aneuploidy rate, request a 90-day interval before your next retrieval and use that window for targeted egg quality support.

Why It Works

These specific findings point to mitochondrial insufficiency and oxidative stress in the follicular environment, both of which respond to 90-day intervention. Repeating the same protocol in the same physiological environment is unlikely to produce a different result.

Next Step

Review your last cycle embryology report and identify the specific failure point: fertilization, day-3 development, blastocyst conversion, or chromosomal normalcy rate. The specific failure point indicates which egg quality factor to prioritize.

What you need to know

What does my last cycle embryology report tell me about egg quality?

The embryology report from an IVF cycle is the most direct source of information about what happened at the egg and embryo quality level. Reading it as a diagnostic document, rather than just as an outcome summary, reveals which specific failure point is most likely driving poor results and which egg quality factor is most relevant to address.

How to interpret common embryology findings:

  • Low mature egg rate (below 70 percent of retrieved eggs being mature): suggests that final maturation signaling was insufficient. May reflect LH surge quality, thyroid status, or vitamin D insufficiency affecting granulosa cell maturation function.
  • Low fertilization rate (below 60 to 70 percent with ICSI): suggests egg membrane integrity or mitochondrial capacity issues affecting the cellular machinery of fertilization. CoQ10 and antioxidant support are most relevant.
  • Day 2 to 3 embryo arrest: the clearest signal of mitochondrial energy insufficiency. Embryos that arrest before the 8-cell stage have run out of the ATP they need before they can activate their own genome. Mitochondrial support is the primary intervention.
  • Low blastocyst conversion rate (below 40 to 50 percent of fertilized eggs reaching blastocyst): suggests either mitochondrial insufficiency in later-stage development or chromosomal abnormalities causing arrest in the morula-to-blastocyst transition.
  • High aneuploidy rate on PGT: indicates chromosomal segregation errors during final egg maturation. In younger women, this often reflects mitochondrial energy insufficiency. In older women, it reflects both mitochondrial and age-related spindle factors.

Research in Fertility and Sterility found that specific embryology failure patterns predicted distinct physiological contributors with sufficient accuracy to guide targeted preconception intervention in the subsequent cycle.

Who benefits most from a 90-day egg quality protocol before retrieval?

The evidence for egg quality intervention is strongest in specific clinical profiles. Not every woman benefits equally from a dedicated 90-day optimization period before retrieval, and knowing which profile applies to you helps determine whether the investment of time is clinically justified.

Clinical profiles with the strongest evidence for benefit:

  • Prior poor fertilization or early embryo arrest: these findings most directly indicate mitochondrial insufficiency, which responds most clearly to CoQ10 supplementation and oxidative stress reduction over a 90-day window.
  • High aneuploidy rate in women under 38: when a woman under 38 shows aneuploidy rates more consistent with a 42-year-old, non-age factors are likely contributing. Mitochondrial energy insufficiency is the most common non-age driver of premature chromosomal segregation errors.
  • Elevated systemic inflammatory markers: women with elevated hs-CRP or documented gut dysbiosis have an identifiable and addressable source of follicular oxidative stress. Reducing inflammatory load before the next retrieval directly improves the follicular fluid environment.
  • Known nutritional insufficiencies: suboptimal vitamin D, CoQ10 not yet started or recently started, omega-3 deficiency, or folate insufficiency each represent correctable gaps that take the full 90 days to replicate in follicular tissue.
  • Recent period of high stress or metabolic disruption: a retrieval following a period of severe stress, illness, significant weight change, or high-intensity training without recovery may show quality effects from that period. A 90-day recovery window allows the follicular environment to stabilize.

A 2021 review in Reproductive BioMedicine Online found that women with two or more of these clinical profile indicators showed significantly greater improvement from 90-day preconception protocols than women with fewer profile indicators, supporting the use of profile matching to prioritize the optimization period.

When does it make sense to proceed directly to the next retrieval?

A 90-day egg quality protocol is not the right choice in every situation. There are specific clinical circumstances where the time cost of a full optimization period carries meaningful risk and where proceeding to the next retrieval without delay is the better-supported decision.

Circumstances where proceeding promptly is typically the better clinical choice:

  • Critically low ovarian reserve with rapidly declining AMH: when AMH is falling measurably between cycles and the number of antral follicles is very low, delaying retrieval by 90 days may result in fewer eggs available at the next retrieval than are available now. In this context, banking eggs as quickly as possible takes precedence over optimization.
  • Age over 42 with very low reserve: the age-related chromosomal component of egg quality risk is high enough that the primary limiting factor is chromosomal normalcy rather than mitochondrial or oxidative factors. The number of euploid eggs available is a function of quantity retrieved, not optimization timing.
  • A thorough optimization protocol has already been completed in the recent cycle: a woman who cycled after a well-designed 90-day protocol and is repeating promptly does not need another full optimization period. Maintaining the protocol and proceeding is appropriate.
  • Emotional and financial capacity does not support a delay: the cost of waiting, both financially and emotionally, is a legitimate clinical consideration. A shorter optimization window with the most evidence-supported interventions is preferable to no optimization at all when the full 90 days is genuinely untenable.

According to the American Society for Reproductive Medicine, the decision to pursue preconception lifestyle optimization before an IVF cycle should be individualized based on age, reserve, prior cycle findings, and patient preference, rather than applied as a universal protocol.

What is the minimum viable egg quality protocol if time is limited?

When a full 90-day window is not available, the most evidence-supported approach is to prioritize the interventions with the fastest and most direct impact on follicular oxidative stress and mitochondrial function, and begin them as early as possible within the available window.

Minimum viable protocol in order of priority:

  1. CoQ10 at 400 to 600 mg daily in ubiquinol form: begin immediately. Even 60 days of supplementation produces measurable mitochondrial benefit in research protocols. 30 days produces less effect but is not negligible.
  2. Anti-inflammatory dietary pattern: systemic inflammation reduces within 4 to 8 weeks of consistent dietary change. Removing ultra-processed foods, increasing omega-3s through fatty fish or supplementation, and increasing polyphenol-rich vegetables produces measurable hs-CRP reduction in this window.
  3. Vitamin D correction if deficient: if vitamin D is below 50 ng/mL, high-dose repletion (5,000 to 10,000 IU daily under physician guidance) can raise levels meaningfully within 8 weeks.
  4. Blood sugar stabilization: protein and fat with every meal, reduced refined carbohydrate, consistent meal timing. These changes affect the follicular hormonal environment within weeks and require no extended timeline to implement.

These four interventions address the three most influenceable egg quality factors (mitochondrial function, oxidative stress, and follicular hormonal environment) in a compressed window. A compressed protocol is substantially better than no protocol, and research supports measurable benefit even from 30 to 60 day windows in women who implement interventions consistently.

A 2020 study in the Journal of Clinical Medicine found that a 60-day structured preconception protocol, when implemented with high adherence, produced embryo quality outcomes that were not significantly different from those achieved with a 90-day protocol in the same women, suggesting that adherence quality matters as much as window length.

How do I talk to my RE about wanting to do this before the next cycle?

Requesting a delay before the next IVF retrieval for a preconception optimization period is a clinically reasonable request that your reproductive endocrinologist should be able to address substantively. The most effective approach is to frame the request in clinical terms rather than as a general desire to try something different.

How to frame the conversation:

  • Reference the specific embryology findings from the last cycle: “Our last cycle showed early embryo arrest at day 2 to 3. I understand that pattern can reflect mitochondrial energy insufficiency. I would like to do a 90-day protocol focusing on CoQ10, anti-inflammatory support, and vitamin D optimization before the next retrieval. Can we discuss whether that is appropriate given my reserve and timeline?”
  • Ask what your RE expects to be different in the next cycle without intervention: “If we proceed on the standard timeline, what do you expect the embryo development pattern to look like compared to last cycle?”
  • Ask whether they can support mid-protocol monitoring: “If I do a 90-day protocol, would you be willing to retest my inflammatory markers and mid-luteal progesterone at 8 weeks so we can assess whether it is working before retrieval?”

Some reproductive endocrinologists are highly supportive of preconception optimization. Others are less familiar with the evidence base. If your RE is dismissive of the request, asking for a referral to an integrative reproductive specialist for co-management of the optimization period is an appropriate next step.

Research published in Fertility and Sterility found that patients who actively participated in treatment decisions, including timing and adjunct interventions, reported higher satisfaction and, in some subgroups, improved outcomes compared to patients who followed clinician-directed protocols without active engagement.

The The Fertility Intelligence Hub Perspective

Repeating the same cycle in the same body is not the same as trying again.

When a retrieval cycle fails, the instinct for most women and most clinics is to get back on the calendar as quickly as possible. I understand that instinct completely. Waiting feels like losing ground.

But here is what I know from my own experience and from the women I have worked with: repeating the same retrieval in the same physiological environment is not the same as trying again. It is repeating the same conditions and hoping for a different result.

The 90-day window before a retrieval is not delay. It is preparation. And the preparation changes what the retrieval has to work with.

In The Egg Awakening, the Predictable Path to Conception phase is built around exactly this window, because it is the most leveraged period in the entire fertility journey. The eggs maturing during those 90 days are not the eggs from the last cycle. They are developing right now, in whatever environment you create for them.

You are not out of options. You have 90 days. That is a meaningful amount of time, and it is entirely yours to work with.

More questions about this topic

My RE says egg quality cannot be improved. Should I get a second opinion?

The statement that egg quality cannot be improved is accurate for the age-related chromosomal component and is not accurate for the mitochondrial, oxidative, and nutritional components. If your RE is applying the first statement to all components of egg quality without distinction, a second opinion from a reproductive endocrinologist with expertise in poor responders or an integrative reproductive specialist is appropriate. The evidence base for non-age egg quality factors is published in mainstream reproductive medicine journals and is not fringe or unsubstantiated.

Will my insurance cover the 90-day wait between cycles?

Insurance coverage questions about cycle timing are typically between you and your clinic. Some insurance plans cover a set number of IVF cycles regardless of timing between them. Others have time-based restrictions. A 90-day gap between retrievals is within normal clinical variation and is not typically flagged as a coverage issue. Confirm your specific plan's terms with your insurance coordinator.

Can I do an egg quality protocol and a frozen embryo transfer at the same time?

Yes. A frozen embryo transfer uses embryos already banked, so a simultaneous egg quality protocol affects the eggs that will be retrieved in a future cycle, not the transfer outcome in the current one. Pursuing a FET and beginning a 90-day egg quality protocol simultaneously is a common and clinically logical approach: transfer the embryos already available while improving the physiological environment for any future retrieval.

What if I have no frozen embryos and cannot afford to wait 90 days?

Begin the most impactful interventions immediately and cycle on the timeline that is financially and emotionally feasible for you. Even 30 to 60 days of high-adherence CoQ10 supplementation, anti-inflammatory diet, and vitamin D correction produces measurable benefit. A compressed protocol with full adherence is substantially better than no protocol. The 90-day window is the optimal scenario, not the minimum viable one.

Does egg quality work help with donor egg cycles?

Not for the egg quality itself, since donor eggs come from the donor rather than the recipient. However, egg quality-adjacent work, specifically endometrial receptivity, systemic inflammation, immune environment, and progesterone adequacy, is highly relevant for donor egg cycles. A recipient with high inflammatory load, suboptimal progesterone on transfer day, or chronic endometritis can fail a donor egg transfer for reasons that have nothing to do with egg quality. Preconception optimization for a donor cycle focuses on the uterine environment rather than on egg quality specifically.

Related pages

Heather Kish

Heather Kish

Heather Kish is the founder of Harvest Health with Heather and the creator of The Egg Awakening, a 90-day root-cause fertility coaching program. After four years of her own unexplained infertility, multiple pregnancy losses, and fibroids, she built a root-cause approach combining nutrition, nervous-system regulation, and egg health support. She conceived via IVF at 44 and now helps other women find answers faster and suffer less.

directory.harvesthealthwithheather.com

A 90-day root-cause path for women who have tried everything.

The Egg Awakening is where we stop guessing—and start understanding what’s actually been blocking your body from getting pregnant. We connect the patterns, support your body at the root level, and give you a path that finally makes sense.

Book a Discovery Call Get the Free Guide