The Fertility Center of Las Vegas is a fertility clinic in Las Vegas, Nevada. They provide infertility diagnosis and treatment to intended parents throughout the US and internationally. Their motto is ‘making parenthood possible’.
This was the first fertility clinic in southern Nevada. The Fertility Center of Las Vegas started the first egg freezing program in the city. At The Fertility Center of Las Vegas both partners will be evaluated for infertility, so that the best determination for treatment can be made.
Evaluation of the male factor involves a semen analysis, post coital test, hormonal determinations of testosterone, FSH (when indicated) and urological evaluation. Female evaluation consists of four factors ÛÓ the cervix, the endometrium, the fallopian tubes and the peritoneum (surroundings of the ovaries within the abdomen), as well as ovulation patterns.
The Fertility Center of Las Vegas has facilitated the births of thousands of healthy children by providing some of the most advanced treatment options available. Their doctors have completed the highest degree of training available for fertility specialists. Together with their staff, the doctors work tirelessly each day to make parenthood possible. The Fertility Center of Las Vegas provides patients with comfortable surroundings, peaceful recovery rooms and as well as appointed lounge areas.
About the team
Dr. Bruce Shapiro is specialty board certified in Obstetrics and Gynecology and is sub-specialty board certified in Reproductive Endocrinology and Infertility. He founded The Fertility Center of Las Vegas, the city’s first infertility practice, which is renowned for research that has advanced the science and practice of Reproductive Endocrinology. Under his direction, The Fertility Center of Las Vegas has grown from a successful local facility to having major regional, national & international influence in the field of Reproductive Endocrinology. Dr. Shapiro has developed techniques that make in vitro fertilization (IVF) safer and more effective, and this research is widely and regularly published in respected medical journals. He completed his residency in Obstetrics and Gynecology at Yale New Haven Hospital, finished his fellowship in Reproductive Endocrinology and Infertility at Yale University, and earned his PhD at the University of Amsterdam in the Netherlands.
Dr. Shapiro’s research background and a long-standing interest in making IVF safer and more effective have led to many innovations. He was one of the first physicians to perform and report on blastocyst transfer in the United States. Blastocyst transfer is a procedure allowing the transfer of fewer embryos into the uterus while maintaining high pregnancy rates and reducing the risk of high order multiple pregnancy (triplets and greater). He received a research award for this work. He was also instrumental in developing techniques for post thaw extended culture (PTEC) following fertilized oocyte cryopreservation demonstrating the importance of embryo-endometrial synchrony for implantation, for which he received another research award. Dr. Shapiro was among the first in the world to standardize the use of GnRH agonist triggers in high responders undergoing ovarian stimulation, a practice that virtually eliminates ovarian hyperstimulation syndrome (OHSS). Dr. Shapiro’s innovations also include the combination of GnRH agonist with low-dose hCG to realize the benefits of each trigger agent. Dr. Shapiro’s work has allowed patients who have had previous failures and/or OHSS in IVF to change the way their IVF cycles are performed so that their chance of success is greatly improved while their risk of complications from OHSS and high order multiple pregnancy are significantly reduced.
Currently, as the Medical Director at The Fertility Center of Las Vegas, Dr. Shapiro’s special interests include women over the age of 35, Polycystic Ovarian Syndrome (PCOS), and patients with previously unsuccessful IVF cycles. In addition to his work at The Fertility Center of Las Vegas, Dr. Shapiro remains on the faculty as Director of the Division of Reproductive Endocrinology and Infertility at the University of Nevada School of Medicine, where he teaches medical students and residents.