Carolinas Fertility Institute
Winston-Salem, NC
Medical director: Tamer M. Yalcinkaya, MD
Outcomes — CDC ART 2022
2,307 total ART cycles reported.
| Patient age | Live birth rate per intended retrieval | Estimated retrievals to live birth |
|---|---|---|
| Under 35 | 78.4% | ~1.3 |
| 35–37 | 61.7% | ~1.6 |
| 38–40 | 37.7% | ~2.7 |
| Over 40 | 19.0% | ~5.3 |
Cumulative success rate for patients using their own eggs (with or without prior ART cycles). Estimated retrievals = 1 / live birth rate (independence assumption — real-world outcomes vary with embryo banking and protocol changes). Source: CDC NASS ART Summary (2022).
Clinic information
- Address
- 3821 Forrestgate Dr, Winston-Salem 27103
- Phone
- (336) 448-9100
- CDC Clinic ID
- 601
- Status
- Open
Source: CDC National ART Surveillance System (NASS) Final ART Summary 2022.
Published pricing
Carolinas Fertility Institute does not publish itemized IVF pricing on its public website. Pricing is typically disclosed by a financial counselor after consultation. Typical US clinic range: $14,000–$30,000 per cycle plus medication.CFI's official website does not publicly list any procedure-specific prices; the financing page confirms third-party financing partners (PatientFi, Future Family, LendingClub, Allegacy, Truliant) are available but no dollar amounts for IVF, FET, ICSI, PGT, egg freezing, or storage are stated anywhere on the site. The sole figure found on their site ('average cost of IVF comes out to around $12,000') appears in a generic educational blog post and is not a CFI-specific quote.Financing options offered.
Cycle characteristics
- Retrievals with no eggs collected
- 4.4%
- Cycles discontinued before transfer
- 10.0%
- Cycles for fertility preservation
- 3.1%
- Transfers using a gestational carrier
- 2.8%
- Frozen embryo transfers
- 97.0%
- Transfers using ICSI
- 92.9%
- Transfers using PGT
- 59.3%
Services offered
- ✓ Donor egg services
- ✓ Donated embryo services
- ✓ Gestational carrier services
- ✓ Egg cryopreservation
- ✓ Embryo cryopreservation
- ✓ SART member clinic
Patient infertility causes (CDC reported)
Causes can overlap — patients may report more than one. Percentages do not sum to 100%.
- Male factor
- 49%
- Ovulatory dysfunction
- 26%
- Diminished ovarian reserve
- 20%
- Other (non-infertility)
- 12%
- Tubal factor
- 11%
- Recurrent pregnancy loss
- 10%
- Endometriosis
- 7%
- Other (infertility)
- 7%
- Unexplained
- 7%
- Uterine factor
- 3%
Insurance coverage in North Carolina
North Carolina has no IVF mandate. Read the full coverage rules →