IVF Institute, P.A. operates its Dallas clinic at 7777 Forest Lane in north Dallas — a medical office complex that houses multiple specialty practices. Patients searching for this address should be aware that 7777 Forest Lane is also home to Dallas-Fort Worth Fertility Associates, which occupies Suite B-443 of the same building. IVF Institute, P.A. operates in a separate suite. Both are established fertility practices sharing a building but functioning as independent clinical entities with distinct physicians, staff, and patient populations. This guide covers IVF Institute, P.A. and its services. For a broader view of fertility clinics in Texas, explore the state directory.
Physicians and Clinical Team
IVF Institute, P.A. is a professional association, a legal and medical structure in Texas that allows physicians to practice under a shared clinical entity while maintaining professional accountability. The practice is led by board-certified reproductive endocrinologists with fellowship training in reproductive endocrinology and infertility — the subspecialty required to perform IVF and manage complex fertility diagnoses including diminished ovarian reserve, repeated implantation failure, and severe male-factor infertility.
The Forest Lane location benefits from the medical infrastructure of north Dallas, which has one of the highest concentrations of specialty care in Texas. The physicians at IVF Institute, P.A. bring direct reproductive medicine expertise to a private practice setting — patients receive individualized attention rather than the volume-driven model of a large hospital system.
Supporting the physicians is a team of registered nurses, certified medical assistants, and dedicated IVF coordinators who guide patients from initial consultation through egg retrieval, embryo transfer, and early pregnancy monitoring. Many patients single out their coordinator as the most consistent point of contact throughout a treatment cycle.
Services and Treatments
IVF Institute, P.A. offers a comprehensive fertility service menu from its Forest Lane location:
- In Vitro Fertilization (IVF) — full-cycle IVF including egg retrieval, fertilization, embryo culture, and transfer
- Intracytoplasmic Sperm Injection (ICSI) — for male-factor infertility, fertilization failure, or low sperm parameters
- Preimplantation Genetic Testing (PGT-A / PGT-M) — chromosomal screening and monogenic disease testing to select the most viable embryo for transfer
- Frozen Embryo Transfer (FET) — transfer of cryopreserved embryos in a medicated or natural cycle
- Intrauterine Insemination (IUI) — with partner or donor sperm, often used as a first-line approach
- Ovulation Induction — monitored cycles for anovulatory patients or those with irregular cycles
- Egg Freezing (Oocyte Cryopreservation) — for elective fertility preservation or medical necessity
- Egg Donation — anonymous and known donor cycles for patients unable to use their own eggs
- Male Infertility Evaluation — semen analysis and hormonal workup to identify male-factor contributions
- Fertility Surgery — including hysteroscopy for uterine abnormalities and laparoscopy for endometriosis or tubal disease
- Recurrent Pregnancy Loss Workup — comprehensive evaluation for immunological, genetic, and anatomical causes
- Fertility Preservation for Cancer Patients — rapid-response protocols before chemotherapy or radiation
Laboratory and Success Rates
IVF laboratory quality is one of the strongest predictors of clinical outcomes. At IVF Institute, P.A., the embryology team manages the critical steps between egg retrieval and embryo transfer: ICSI fertilization, extended blastocyst culture, embryo biopsy for PGT, and vitrification for cryopreservation. The use of blastocyst-stage culture — allowing embryos to develop to day five or six — is standard and supports better embryo selection before transfer.
Patients should review the most current cycle-level data published by the CDC's ART Surveillance program and the SART Clinic Summary Report.
Patient Experience
The 7777 Forest Lane building is a well-established north Dallas medical complex. Patients can access both IVF Institute, P.A. and Dallas-Fort Worth Fertility Associates in the same building — which can be a source of confusion when scheduling or navigating parking. Patients should confirm they have the correct suite number when booking their appointment.
The north Dallas location is convenient to residents of Plano, Richardson, Garland, and the northern Dallas suburbs, reducing the commute burden for patients who face frequent monitoring appointments during a stimulation cycle. Early-morning blood draws and ultrasound monitoring visits — typically scheduled before clinic hours begin — are easier to manage when the clinic is close to home or work.
IVF Institute, P.A.'s private-practice model means patients often develop a closer ongoing relationship with their physician compared to large hospital-affiliated programs, where fellows and rotating staff may be more prominent. Many patients find that consistent physician involvement at critical moments — like a difficult retrieval or a challenging transfer — makes a real difference in their experience.
Texas has no state IVF mandate, so many patients come to their first consultation with cost concerns already in mind. The practice's financial and administrative staff are prepared to have those conversations early and help patients understand their options.
Considering At-Home Insemination?
Not every fertility journey begins in a clinic. At-home intracervical insemination (ICI) is a lower-cost, private option that suits patients with no known fertility diagnosis — including single parents by choice, same-sex couples, and people who want to try a few cycles before committing to clinical treatment.
At-home insemination kits like those from MakeAMom come with step-by-step instructions designed for donor or partner sperm. Kits are a one-time purchase that can be reused until conception succeeds, require no clinic visit, and arrive in plain, discreet packaging. Many patients use them as a first step while working toward a fertility consultation — or alongside ovulation tracking while they wait for an appointment slot.
If you have a known fertility diagnosis, have been trying for 12 months without success (six months if you're over 35), or your physician has already recommended IUI or IVF, a board-certified reproductive endocrinologist is the right next step.
Insurance and Financing
Texas has no state mandate requiring insurers to cover IVF or fertility treatment. Patients at IVF Institute, P.A. typically pay out of pocket for IVF, PGT, and related advanced procedures unless their employer provides a specific fertility benefit through a self-insured ERISA plan — which some large Texas employers do.
The financial coordinator at IVF Institute, P.A. can help patients understand cost estimates, payment plan options, and any shared-risk or refund programs the practice makes available. Patients should also ask about bundled pricing for multi-cycle packages, which can reduce the per-cycle cost and provide some financial protection if the first transfer doesn't result in pregnancy.
Frequently Asked Questions
Both IVF Institute P.A. and Dallas-Fort Worth Fertility Associates are at 7777 Forest Lane — are they the same practice? No. They are two independent fertility practices occupying different suites in the same medical office building. Each has its own physicians, staff, billing, and patient population. When scheduling, patients should confirm the correct suite number for whichever practice they intend to visit.
Does Texas mandate insurance coverage for IVF? No. Texas does not require insurers to cover IVF. Patients should check their individual employer-sponsored plan for any fertility benefits, but most Texas patients pay out of pocket for IVF.
How do I know if I need IVF or whether IUI is sufficient? The treatment recommendation depends on the diagnosis. Patients with unexplained infertility, mild male-factor, or ovulatory disorders may start with IUI or ovulation induction. Patients with blocked tubes, severe male-factor, diminished ovarian reserve, or a history of IUI failures typically proceed directly to IVF. The initial consultation and workup guide this decision.
Can I use frozen embryos from a previous IVF cycle at another clinic? In many cases, yes — embryo transport from another clinic's storage facility is logistically possible. Patients should discuss the requirements and costs of transporting embryos with the IVF Institute team prior to scheduling a frozen embryo transfer cycle.
