What Is Mini or Micro IVF?

Pregnant woman near jar of cash, represents saving money with mini-IVF cycle
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Mini-IVF (also known as micro or minimal stimulation IVF) is similar to conventional IVF in the procedures used during treatment. As with IVF, you have monitoring throughout the cycle, an egg retrieval, fertilization in the lab of the egg and sperm, and embryo transfer.

What’s different is how much medication is used to stimulate the ovaries to produce eggs. While typical IVF aims to produce several eggs for retrieval, mini-IVF uses weaker medications or lower doses of medications to produce only a few eggs. It may also be done without any ovarian stimulating drugs.

Because lower amounts of fertility drugs are used, the cost per cycle is lower, and the risk of ovarian hyperstimulation syndrome (OHSS) is reduced.

Who Should Consider Mini-IVF?

Mini-IVF may be a better option if...

  • You are about to start cancer treatment, are doing IVF to preserve your fertility before treatment, and fertility drugs might exasperate the cancer you have.
  • You don’t have the cash for conventional IVF, which is significantly more expensive.
  • You have dislike needles. (Fewer fertility drugs means fewer injections!)
  • You have low ovarian reserves. With low ovarian reserves, high doses of fertility drugs are unlikely to produce a high quantity of eggs. The money spent on those drugs may be wasted.
  • You have PCOS and are at risk of developing OHSS.

A couple may also choose mini-IVF if they want to avoid the possible risk of multiples during IUI treatment. With IUI, the doctor can’t control how many eggs may fertilize. With mini-IVF, you can decide to transfer just one or two embryos. Another advantage of mini-IVF is you can do the treatment cycles back to back. You don’t need to rest. If you’re in a rush for some particular reason, this may make mini-IVF preferably to conventional IVF.

Medications

During mini-IVF, Clomid may be used to stimulate the ovaries , instead of gonadotropins. Gonadotropins include injectable medications like Gonal-F, Follistim, and the like. Alternatively, lower doses of gonadotropins may be used, with the aim of producing only a couple eggs. For some women, it’s also possible to do mini-IVF with no ovulation stimulation drugs. This is sometimes also known as a “natural cycle.”

A natural mini-IVF cycle wouldn’t be appropriate if there are any problems with ovulation preventing pregnancy, but it may be an acceptable choice in cases of blocked fallopian tubes and some cases of male infertility. Besides ovarian stimulation drugs, you also may need to take a GnRH antagonist (like Anatagon and Cetrotide), which prevents ovulation from occurring too early. If you ovulate too soon, the eggs can't be retrieved from the body and IVF can't take place.

Success Rates

Success rates for mini-IVF are generally lower than conventional IVF, but that doesn’t mean it’s not a better choice for some couples.

A randomized control study compared conventional IVF treatment to mini-IVF. The study included 564 women age 39 or younger. They were randomly assigned to the mini-IVF group or typical IVF group. They underwent treatment over a period of six months.

Here were the results of the study:

  • 49% of the mini-IVF group conceived and eventually gave birth
  • 63% of the conventional IVF group conceived and eventually gave birth
  • None of the mini-IVF group developed ovarian hyperstimulation syndrome (OHSS)
  • 5.7% of the conventional IVF group developed OHSS
  • Significantly fewer gonadotropins were used in the mini-IVF group, lowering overall cost per cycle

Based on the results of this study, mini-IVF might be an especially good choice for a woman at risk for developing OHSS. The study also found that the rate of twins was much lower with mini-IVF, however the study performed single embryo transfer on the mini-IVF patients and double embryo transfer on the conventional IVF patients. Clearly, if you’re transferring two embryos instead of one, the rate of twins will be higher.

Further studies need to be done to compare the overall cost per life birth for mini-IVF and conventional IVF and to determine if the odds of multiples is truly any different between the two procedures.

After Failed IVF

Isn’t bigger always better? Not necessarily.

Dr. John Zhang, founder and medical director of New Hope Fertility Center, explains that mini-IVF is aimed at producing quality eggs, while conventional IVF is going for quantity. In some women, trying to produce many eggs can backfire and cause problems. Having a failed conventional IVF treatment doesn’t mean mini-IVF won’t work.

“Failing a cycle happens for a number of reasons,” says Dr. Zhang. “Some of these are age-related poor egg quality, stress, poor uterine environment that prevents an egg from implanting, incorrect hormone levels, and more. In many cases, someone who fails a conventional cycle will have better luck with a lower stimulation protocol like mini-IVF since it can produce higher quality eggs.

“It is a case by case situation, but you should not assume that because one cycle fails, all treatments will,” explained Dr. Zhang. “Studies show that women can have higher success with lower stimulation over the course of multiple cycles. By trying another treatment, we have seen better success.”

Cost

One of the biggest benefits of mini-IVF is the lower cost per cycle.

A typical IVF cycle costs $10,000 to $15,000, depending on what procedures are needed.

Mini-IVF costs around $5,000 to 7,000 per cycle.

IUI vs. Mini-IVF Treatment

IUI treatment costs less than mini-IVF. But with IUI, the risk of multiples is higher. With mini-IVF, only one embryo is transferred. With IUI, you can’t control how many eggs will become fertilized. Also, success rates of IUI tend to be lower than mini-IVF.

Possible Downsides

If you don’t conceive after a few cycles, the costs can actually be greater in the long run. With typical IVF, if one cycle doesn’t work, you usually will have some embryos left over to freeze. These can be used during a frozen embryo transfer (FET). With mini-IVF, you are less likely to have any leftover embryos for future cycles.

There is also a greater risk of having no eggs to fertilize when using mini-IVF. Not every egg that is produced will survive the IVF process. As an example, with conventional IVF, if 10 eggs are retrieved, it's possible that only five may become fertilized. Of those, only three may become healthy embryos to transfer.

If you start off with just two or three eggs, and all of those eggs don’t become fertilized or do not survive the embryo stage long enough to be transferred, you’ve lost the entire cycle. Mini-IVF is also not appropriate when you need a large number of eggs. If you’re freezing your eggs, or an egg donor is donating eggs, you need to use more fertility drugs in order to produce a greater number of oocytes.

A Word From Verywell

When compared to typical IVF, mini-IVF costs less per cycle and lowers your risk of developing ovarian hyperstimulation syndrome. However, success rates are generally lower with mini-IVF. Compared to IUI, mini-IVF costs slightly more than IUI but has improved pregnancy success rates. You’re also less likely to conceive multiples with mini-IVF when compared to IUI treatment.

6 Sources
Verywell Family uses only high-quality sources, including peer-reviewed studies, to support the facts within our articles. Read our editorial process to learn more about how we fact-check and keep our content accurate, reliable, and trustworthy.
  1. Zhang J. Resurgence of Minimal Stimulation In Vitro Fertilization with A Protocol Consisting of Gonadotropin Releasing Hormone-Agonist Trigger and Vitrified-Thawed Embryo Transfer. Int J Fertil Steril. 2016;10(2):148-53.  doi:10.22074/ijfs.2016.4903

  2. Silber S, Barbey N. Use of a novel minimal stimulation in vitro fertilization (“mini-IVF”) protocol for low ovarian reserve and for older women. Fertility and Sterility. 2013;(100)3:S18. doi:10.1016/j.fertnstert.2013.07.180

  3. Zhang JJ, Merhi Z, et al. “Minimal stimulation IVF vs conventional IVF: a randomized controlled trial.” Am J Obstet Gynecol. 2016;(214)1:96.e1-8. doi: 10.1016/j.ajog.2015.08.009.

  4. Society for Assisted Reproductive Technology. Frequently asked questions.

  5. Zhang J, Chang L, et al. Minimal ovarian stimulation (MINI-IVF) for IVF utilizing vitrification, and frozen single embryo transfer (SET). Fertility and Sterility. 2010;(94)4:S160. doi:10.1016/j.fertnstert.2010.07.638

  6. Acharya KS, Acharya CR, Bishop K, Harris B, Raburn D, Muasher SJ. Freezing of all embryos in in vitro fertilization is beneficial in high responders, but not intermediate and low responders: an analysis of 82,935 cycles from the Society for Assisted Reproductive Technology registry. Fertil Steril. 2018;110(5):880-887.  doi:10.1016/j.fertnstert.2018.05.024

Additional Reading

By Rachel Gurevich, RN
Rachel Gurevich is a fertility advocate, author, and recipient of The Hope Award for Achievement, from Resolve: The National Infertility Association. She is a professional member of the Association of Health Care Journalists and has been writing about women’s health since 2001. Rachel uses her own experiences with infertility to write compassionate, practical, and supportive articles.