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Balaji Horizon Women's Hospital

Reviewed by: Dr. Priyadatt Patel, Senior Gynecologist · Advanced Laparoscopic Surgeon · IVF and Endometriosis Programme Lead. Last updated: 26 May 2026.
Programme

Mild Stimulation IVF — Lower Dose, Same Goal

Mild stimulation IVF uses lower doses of FSH (sometimes with letrozole or clomiphene adjuncts) to recruit fewer but high-quality eggs. Lower medication burden, lower cost, less OHSS risk. This page explains when mild stimulation is the right choice.

1. What mild stimulation means

Lower-dose FSH (typically 150 IU or less daily versus 225–450 IU in conventional protocols). Often combined with letrozole or clomiphene to boost endogenous FSH release. Targets 4–8 mature eggs rather than maximising egg yield. Fewer monitoring visits, fewer injections, lower cost per cycle.

2. Who benefits

Poor ovarian responders — high doses fail to recruit additional follicles, so lower doses save medication without losing yield. Patients preferring minimal hormonal load. Repeated full-dose IVF cycles without success — change strategy. Patients with concerns about long-term safety of intensive stimulation. Limited budgets where lower cost per cycle enables more cycles.

3. Egg yield expectations

4–8 mature eggs typical (versus 8–15 in conventional). Per-cycle pregnancy rates lower than conventional in good responders. Cumulative across multiple cycles in poor responders — comparable to conventional, sometimes better. Quality may be preserved or even improved with gentler stimulation in some patient subgroups.

4. Letrozole-assisted protocols

Letrozole (aromatase inhibitor) for 5 days starting day 2–3 of cycle. Reduces estrogen, boosts endogenous FSH production. Lower exogenous FSH doses needed. Particularly useful for poor responders. Sometimes used in oncofertility (cancer patients where estrogen elevation is problematic). Off-label use but well-established.

5. Clomiphene-assisted protocols

Clomiphene citrate 100 mg daily for 5 days. Similar mechanism to letrozole. Used in mini-IVF protocols. Lower cost than gonadotropins. Less commonly used now as letrozole has shown better outcomes with fewer side effects.

6. Monitoring and cycle management

Fewer monitoring visits than conventional (2–3 versus 4–6). Lower estradiol levels make follicle counting more important than blood monitoring. Trigger timing similar to conventional protocols. Retrieval same procedure but fewer eggs collected.

7. Cumulative outcomes

Per cycle: lower pregnancy rates than conventional in good responders. Cumulative across 2–3 cycles: comparable or better than 1 conventional cycle in poor responders. Total cost across multiple mild cycles may be similar or lower than fewer conventional cycles. Less psychological and physical burden per cycle.

8. When mild is not appropriate

Time-critical cases (oncofertility, advanced maternal age with limited cycles) — conventional maximises egg yield per cycle. Young good responders seeking single embryo transfer with PGT (need euploid embryos from cohort) — conventional more efficient. Patients comfortable with intensive stimulation and seeking maximum eggs per cycle. Mild is one tool among several, not universally preferred.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is mild stimulation IVF?
Lower-dose FSH stimulation (150 IU or less daily), sometimes with letrozole or clomiphene, targeting 4–8 mature eggs rather than maximising yield. Lower medication burden, lower cost per cycle.
Will I get fewer eggs?
Yes — typically 4–8 versus 8–15 in conventional protocols. Per-cycle pregnancy rates lower but cumulative outcomes across multiple cycles can be comparable in poor responders.
Is mild stimulation as effective?
In poor responders where high doses do not recruit more follicles — yes. In good responders seeking maximum eggs in fewer cycles — conventional is more efficient. Choice individualised.
Is mild stimulation safer?
Lower OHSS risk (almost none). Lower hormone exposure. May be psychologically and physically easier per cycle. Long-term safety is reassuring but conventional IVF is also safe.
Will it cost less?
Lower medication cost per cycle. Lower monitoring cost. Lower retrieval cost (slightly). May require more cycles for same cumulative success. Total cost can be similar or lower depending on patient profile.
Is mild stimulation only for poor responders?
No — also chosen by patients preferring minimal medication, those with prior conventional cycle failures, oncofertility cases, and selected patient preferences. Poor responder is the most common indication.
How does letrozole work in IVF?
Letrozole reduces estrogen production, which boosts endogenous FSH release. Combined with exogenous FSH, achieves stimulation with lower medication doses. Particularly useful in poor responders and oncofertility.
Can I use mild stimulation for fertility preservation?
Yes, when appropriate. For young women freezing eggs preventively, conventional often preferred (maximise eggs). For older women, oncofertility, or those preferring lower medication burden, mild is reasonable.

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Dr. Priyadatt Patel

Senior Gynecologist · Advanced Laparoscopic Surgeon · IVF and Endometriosis Programme Lead

MS OBGyn · Pregnancy Care · Advanced Gynaecological Ultrasound · Fertility Preservation

ESHRE / ESGE / AAGL / ASRM guideline-aligned practice. 3D Karl Storz precision technique. Fertility-preservation-first philosophy. Evidence-based decisions, honest counselling, long-term outcomes orientation.

Endometriosis
Superficial to deep infiltrating, fertility-preserving excision
IVF & Fertility
Individualised protocols, ART Level 2 lab, transparent outcomes
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3D Karl Storz precision, nerve-sparing technique
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Antenatal care, high-risk pregnancy, advanced ultrasound
Balaji Horizon Women Hospital
Science City Road, Ahmedabad 380060
Mon–Sat 11:00–20:00 · +91 97234 31544
Balaji Women Clinic (AEC)
Naranpura, Ahmedabad
Mon–Sat 08:30–10:30 · +91 70460 02566
Hospital
Balaji Horizon Women's Hospital
Satyamev Eminence, Beside Saptak Bungalows & AUDA Water Tank
Science City Road, Ahmedabad 380060, Gujarat
+91 9723431544
Clinic
AEC Clinic — Naranpura
Outreach consultation clinic
Naranpura, Ahmedabad, Gujarat
+91 7046002566
Clinicians
Dr. Priyadatt Patel
Senior Gynecologist · Advanced Laparoscopic Surgeon · IVF and Endometriosis Programme Lead

Dr. Shreya Iyengar Patel
Antenatal & Postnatal Care · Fetal Medicine
Contact
Direct line: +91 9723431544
Email: [email protected]
WhatsApp: +91 9723431544
Educational content on this site is general information, not medical advice. Individual clinical decisions should be discussed in consultation.
Medical Disclaimer: Content on this website is for educational and informational purposes only. It does not substitute professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult Dr. Priyadatt Patel or a qualified healthcare professional for your specific situation. Treatment outcomes vary by patient — published evidence and clinic averages are not guarantees of individual results. © 2026 Balaji Horizon Women's Hospital. All rights reserved.