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Baby born from embryo frozen over 30 years ago

From: CanaryFan98 Find all posts by CanaryFan98 Send private message to CanaryFan98
Date: Mon, 04-Aug-2025 3:06:08 PM PDT
Where: SoapZone Community Message Board
In reply to: ~~**Week of August 4th Chat Post**~~ posted by Leia
Truth is stranger than fiction

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Baby born from embryo frozen over 30 years ago
Welcome to the world, baby Thaddeus!

World's 'oldest' baby born from embryo frozen in 1994 Thaddeus Daniel Pierce made history after being born to an Ohio couple from an embryo frozen for 30 years.
An Ohio couple says that they have welcomed a baby boy who was born from an embryo that was frozen over 30 years ago.

Lindsey Pierce, 35, and her husband Tim Pierce, 34, of London, Ohio, are now parents to baby Thaddeus, who was born July 26, according to MIT Technology Review.

This photo provided by Rejoice and John David Gordon on July 31, 2025, shows Thaddeus Pierce.
Rejoice and John David Gordon via AP
The Pierces told the publication they had been trying to conceive for seven years and "adopted" an embryo through an embryo adoption agency.

The embryo the Pierces adopted was obtained through in vitro fertilization, or IVF, in 1994, according to MIT Technology Review.

In the IVF process, ovulation is induced and eggs are removed from a patient's ovaries. The eggs are then fertilized with sperm outside of the body, and the resulting successful embryos are either placed in the patient's uterus in the hope of pregnancy or are stored in a laboratory for future use, according to the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists.

Couple welcome twins from embryos frozen 30 years ago
After a successful embryo transfer using the adopted embryo, Lindsey Pierce became pregnant.

ABC News medical contributor Dr. Alok Patel, who was not involved in Lindsey Pierce's care, said the age of a frozen embryo is not necessarily a risk.

This photo provided by Rejoice and John David Gordon shows Tim and Lindsey Pierce in November 2024 at Rejoice Fertility in Knoxville, Tenn.
Rejoice and John David Gordon via AP
"If these eggs are frozen properly and they are thawed and pass screening, they can be just as healthy as an embryo created today," said Patel, a board-certified pediatrician.

The Pierces could not be reached for comment by ABC News. The couple told The Associated Press in a statement published Friday that their goal throughout the process was just to "have a baby."

“We didn’t go into this thinking about records -- we just wanted to have a baby,” Lindsey Pierce said, according to the AP.


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