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Fitting medical appointments into a busy schedule is not always easy, but a new program at Reproductive Science Center aims to make appointments more convenient and accessible. The Open Access Program allows patients to complete fertility monitoring and other services at a local OB/GYN office during the fertility treatment process. This access to local medical services will make appointments more convenient and minimize patient travel time. Patients will only need to return to RSC offices for certain medical treatments, including the initial consultation, pre-operative visits, egg retrieval and transfer.

No matter what stage a patient is at in exploring her fertility–from discussing fertility with an OB/GYN, to consulting a fertility doctor or beginning fertility treatment–the Open Access Program (OAP) can be beneficial.

“We are very excited to offer this program to our patients,” says Sheldon Josephs, Executive Director of Reproductive Science Center. “The response so far has been extremely positive. Now patients wanting our infertility clinical excellence can access us and no longer have to spend extra time traveling for their infertility treatment. It’s a helpful offering that makes our services within reach.”

Once a patient has decided to enter the program and has discussed a course of treatment with a Reproductive Science Center (RSC) physician, they are then assigned a case manager at RSC. The case manager works directly with the patient’s local monitoring office for treatment correspondence and scheduling services. Patients will visit their local office for monitoring and other services such as injection and medication classes (not all locations), ultrasound studies and blood work. The RSC physician is responsible for fertility treatment services and treatment orders.

RSC and the monitoring office are separate business entities. Both entities set and maintain their own service fee schedule and billing policy. An RSC Financial Counselor will provide you with an estimate of IVF cycle costs after checking your insurance benefits (where applicable) and the treatment plan from your physician.

Updated as of 2024: RSC currently has one OAP location – in Monterey.

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SAN RAMON, Calif., June 30, 2011–In honor of American servicemen and servicewomen, the Reproductive Science Center of the San Francisco Bay Area (RSC) is offering a 5-10 percent discount to all active duty military personnel and their families.

The 5-10 percent discount is good on all IVF procedures at RSC, and applies to cash services provided within the IVF treatment cycle. The discount is valid for patients with no insurance coverage.

Discount exclusions include:

  • Initial Consult
  • Pre Cycle testing
  • Fees paid to a third party vendor collected by RSC ie. private lab services, drugs

Interested military personnel can learn more by calling the office.

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RSC patient & lymphoma survivor celebrates

Fatherhood doubly special this year for Berkeley Ironman athlete who beat advanced cancer & then became a parent a second time with five-year-old frozen sperm

SAN RAMON, California (May 25, 2011) – For Christophe Job, 49, of Berkeley, Father’s Day is doubly special this year with the recent arrival of a second son to help him celebrate a double victory against long odds: beating advanced cancer and twice becoming a parent.

Cancer free since 2006, Christophe celebrates this Father’s Day with his wife, Kerry, 39, and sons Quentin, eight months old, and three-year-old Colin, who were both born with his frozen sperm in combination with in vitro fertilization (IVF).

“Thanks to the miracle of medical science, we didn’t have to throw away our dreams of having children,” Christophe said. Colin, born June 14, 2008, and his brother Quentin, born September 21, 2010, were created with their mother’s eggs and father’s thawed sperm at the Reproductive Science Center of the San Francisco Bay Area (RSC) under the guidance of Louis Weckstein, M.D., Medical and IVF Director.

Nearly five years ago, Christophe was diagnosed with Stage IV Hodgkin’s Lymphoma. Although having a family was far from his mind prior to the diagnosis, he froze his sperm before treatment began, since chemotherapy would render him infertile.

For Colin’s birth, RSC’s team of physicians and scientists combined fresh eggs retrieved from Kerry with the sperm Christophe had frozen two years prior. Kerry’s unused eggs were combined with Christophe’s sperm to make 12 frozen embryos that were stored in the lab, one of which would become Quentin a little more than two years later.

At RSC, the rate of pregnancy success from frozen embryos is over 50 percent, way above the national average. The latest statistics gathered from members of the Society of Assisted Reproductive Technology (SART) show the average pregnancy success rate from thawed embryos was 30 percent.

Just eight months after his 2006 wedding, Christophe, an athletic and vital Oracle executive, struggled with persistent flu-like symptoms, weight loss, and fatigue. When blood analysis revealed advanced Hodgkin’s Lymphoma, his doctors were emphatic that he begin chemotherapy as soon as possible. Since the Jobs planned a family some day, Christophe banked his sperm before undergoing six months of chemo.

Both cancer and cancer treatments can cause infertility in men and women. Chemotherapy is designed to kill rapidly dividing cells throughout the body, while leaving other cells intact. Cancer cells divide rapidly, but so do egg and sperm cells. In general, the higher the dose and longer the treatment, the greater the chances of reproductive problems.

“We were confident that Christophe’s sperm would fertilize well,” said Weckstein. “Some men have fathered perfectly healthy babies using sperm that has been frozen as long as 23 years. The technology has come along since the first child was born from semen stored for over one year in 1973.” The rate of pregnancy success using Kerry’s frozen embryos stored after her first IVF cycle is just as good as fresh embryos, he added.

RSC has worked extensively with both male and female cancer patients, who have several options to preserve their fertility prior to chemo, radiation, or surgery for cancer, such as freezing (cryopreservation) of eggs, sperm, and embryos, ovarian suppression, use of donor egg and embryos, as well as gestational carriers or surrogates.

After an aggressive course of chemotherapy, Christophe “wanted to be healthier than he was before the cancer,” Kerry said, and so he trained for and completed two Ironman Triathlon competitions. Kerry was seven months pregnant with Colin when Christophe completed his first Ironman in April 2008.

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Bay IVF specialists launch Sharing Hope Program in partnership with Lance Armstrong’s LIVESTRONG Foundation

SAN RAMON, CALIFORNIA (September 21, 2010)– In efforts to increase awareness of fertility preservation options for cancer patients whose treatment may jeopardize their future fertility, Reproductive Science Center of the San Francisco Bay Area (RSC) created the Sharing Hope Program in partnership with Lance Armstrong’s LIVESTRONG Foundation.

The cancer survivor and champion cyclist created the foundation in 1997 to provide reproductive information, emotional, and financial resources to cancer patients and survivors whose medical treatments present the risk of infertility.

RSC’s Sharing Hope Program offers patients an extensive educational web portal for men and women about fertility preservation options that include assisted reproductive techniques such as egg, embryo, and sperm freezing. The program also helps educate patients about risks to fertility that can result from treatment such as chemotherapy, radiation, and surgery. Sharing Hope also describes hopeful options for parenthood before and after cancer treatment, offers news on cutting edge research and treatment, and financial aid options.

“Cancer diagnosis and treatment itself is stressful enough for patients, then adding fertility planning on top of that can be overwhelming. Sharing Hope is a valuable resource intended to help ease the confusion and direct patients to the best fertility preservation services, as well as financing options for techniques that are not often covered by insurance,” said Mary Hinckley, M.D, RSC reproductive endocrinologist.

Despite widespread recognition that cancer therapies can affect a patient’s fertility, researchers found that fewer than 25 percent of oncologists inform their patients about fertility preservation options and that less than 60 percent of patients received fertility information after cancer treatment (when their fertility may have already been diminished or relinquished).

RSC provides both men and women several successful options for preserving their reproductive health by freezing eggs, embryos, and sperm (also known as cryopreservation). Cancer treatments like chemotherapy are designed to kill rapidly dividing cells throughout the body, while leaving other cells intact. Cancer cells divide rapidly, but so do egg and sperm cells. Thus infertility is a potential side effect of cancer treatment.

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