Mapping IVF clinics across 6 countries for Genomic Prediction's LifeView expansion into the region. Identifying clinics that already ship embryo biopsies overseas — the lowest-friction path to PGT-P partnership.
Four types of embryo genetic testing, the complete IVF + PGT-P workflow with costs and timelines, and what to expect at every step.
What it tests: Whether an embryo carries a specific gene mutation known to run in the family.
Examples: Cystic fibrosis, sickle cell disease, Huntington's, BRCA1/2 (hereditary breast cancer), thalassemia, spinal muscular atrophy.
Why it matters: If both parents carry the same recessive mutation, each embryo has a 25% chance of being affected. PGT-M identifies which embryos are clear.
What it tests: Whether an embryo has the correct arrangement of chromosomal segments — no pieces swapped, flipped, or missing.
Examples: Translocations (chromosome segments swap places), inversions (segments flip), deletions (segments missing).
Why it matters: Parents who carry a balanced translocation are healthy themselves, but their embryos have a high chance of unbalanced chromosomes — leading to miscarriage or developmental conditions.
What it tests: Whether an embryo has the correct number of chromosomes — exactly 46 (23 pairs).
Examples: Down syndrome (extra chromosome 21), Turner syndrome (missing X), Edwards syndrome (extra chromosome 18).
Why it matters: Aneuploidy is the #1 cause of IVF failure and miscarriage. It increases sharply with maternal age — at 40, over 60% of embryos are aneuploid. Transferring only euploid (normal count) embryos improves success rates.
What it tests: An embryo's combined genetic risk for common diseases — using hundreds to thousands of gene variants together, not just one gene.
Examples: Heart disease, type 2 diabetes, breast cancer, schizophrenia, Alzheimer's, obesity risk.
Why it matters: Most diseases aren't caused by a single gene — they're polygenic. PGT-P uses the same biopsy already taken for PGT-A (no extra procedure) to calculate a risk profile across multiple diseases. This is what Genomic Prediction / LifeView offers.
From first consultation to pregnancy test — what to expect at every stage, how much it costs in Southeast Asia, and what to watch for.
What happens: Both partners undergo a comprehensive fertility assessment. For her: hormonal bloodwork (AMH, FSH, LH, estradiol), transvaginal ultrasound to count antral follicles, and possibly an HSG (tubal patency test). For him: semen analysis. If PGT-M is also desired, both partners do carrier screening for genetic mutations.
What happens: Daily hormone injections (gonadotropins like Gonal-F, Menopur, or Pergoveris) stimulate the ovaries to produce multiple eggs instead of the usual one. You'll visit the clinic every 2–3 days for ultrasound monitoring and blood tests. When follicles are mature (typically 18–20mm), a "trigger shot" (hCG or GnRH agonist) is given to finalize egg maturation.
What happens: 36 hours after the trigger shot, eggs are collected via transvaginal ultrasound-guided aspiration. A thin needle passes through the vaginal wall into each follicle. The procedure takes 15–30 minutes under light sedation. You'll rest at the clinic for 1–2 hours, then go home. Plan for 1–2 days of rest afterward.
What happens: Eggs are fertilized using ICSI (intracytoplasmic sperm injection) — a single sperm is injected directly into each mature egg. Embryos are then cultured in an incubator for 5–6 days until they reach the blastocyst stage. The clinic will typically update you on day 1 (fertilization results), day 3 (cell division), and day 5–6 (blastocyst formation).
What happens: An embryologist removes 5–10 cells from the trophectoderm (the outer cell layer that becomes the placenta, not the inner cell mass that becomes the baby). This is the same biopsy used for PGT-A — one biopsy, multiple tests. Immediately after biopsy, embryos are vitrified (flash-frozen) and stored while waiting for results.
What happens: The clinic packages the biopsy tubes and ships them to Genomic Prediction's laboratory in North Brunswick, New Jersey, USA. Shipping uses specialized medical couriers (World Courier, Cryoport, or similar) with temperature-controlled containers and chain-of-custody tracking.
What happens: At Genomic Prediction's lab, DNA is extracted from the biopsy cells, amplified, and genotyped on a high-density SNP array. PGT-A results (chromosome count) are generated alongside PGT-P polygenic risk scores. Each embryo receives an Embryo Health Score (EHS) — a composite risk profile across multiple diseases. LifeView's platform includes PGT-A at no additional cost when bundled with PGT-P.
What happens: Your fertility doctor receives a report for each embryo showing: (1) PGT-A result — euploid (normal chromosomes) or aneuploid (abnormal), and (2) PGT-P Embryo Health Score with per-disease risk profiles. Only euploid embryos are candidates for transfer. Among the euploid embryos, PGT-P scores help inform selection. Genetic counseling is strongly recommended to interpret results.
What happens: The uterine lining is prepared for implantation — either through a medicated cycle (estrogen + progesterone) or a natural/modified natural cycle timed to ovulation. On transfer day, the selected embryo is thawed and transferred into the uterus via a thin catheter. The procedure takes 5–10 minutes, is painless, and requires no sedation. You rest for 30 minutes, then go home.
What happens: A beta-hCG blood test is done 10–14 days after embryo transfer. If positive, a follow-up blood test confirms hCG is rising. A viability ultrasound at 6–7 weeks confirms heartbeat and rules out ectopic pregnancy. Once a heartbeat is confirmed, you're typically graduated to a regular OB-GYN.
Costs are estimates based on publicly available data and may vary significantly by clinic, country, and individual case. Genomic Prediction does not publish standard pricing — contact sales@genomicprediction.com or your clinic for a specific quote. All costs in USD.
IVF clinics across Southeast Asia, colored by partnership readiness tier.
All mapped clinics with filtering by country and partnership readiness tier.
| Clinic | Country | City | Tier | Services | Ships Overseas |
|---|
Country-by-country PGT approval status, cross-border biopsy shipping rules, and IVF costs.
All research data is available as JSON. No authentication required.
All clinics with full metadata — name, country, city, tier, services, contact info, coordinates.
Aggregated counts: clinics by country, by tier, data completeness metrics.
Per-country regulatory status: PGT approvals, shipping rules, costs, key insights.
Complete research report combining clinics, stats, regulatory, and methodology.
How this data was collected and verified.