News
IVF in transition: 2025 realities and what device manufacturers must do now

FinDBest IVF is a global B2B platform that connects manufacturers of fertility and reproductive health devices with IVF-specialist distributors in over 150 countries. We simplify global expansion, regulatory pathway planning, and distributor onboarding.
Each year, the European Society of Human Reproduction and Embryology (ESHRE) Congress reveals not just clinical updates, but also clear signals about where the IVF market is heading.
In 2025, Circular Communications compiled a focused commercial and product roadmap briefing from the event, kindly shared recently by Dr Georg Griesinger on Linkedin.
What follows is a practical breakdown of their insights—designed for medical device manufacturers and clinical users who need to make fast, evidence-based business and product decisions:
The Six Shifts Reshaping IVF
The IVF landscape in 2025 is not simply evolving—it is undergoing structural change.
Six key forces are reshaping how medical devices are adopted, evaluated, and purchased. Manufacturers who adapt early will find more predictable paths to market.
Those who do not risk falling behind as clinics tighten their criteria.
Cost pressures are now the central constraint
IVF remains financially inaccessible for large segments of the population.
In many countries, patients are still paying out of pocket.
The result is a growing preference for solutions designed around total cost of ownership (TCO).
That means not just upfront purchasing price/cost, but reusability, reliability, throughput, maintenance needs, and training time.
Products that align with capital expenditure (CAPEX) models and flexible subscriptions—especially those matched to clinic cash flow—are more likely to be adopted.
Growth in mature markets has flatlined
In many high-income countries, the number of IVF cycles per capita has plateaued.
For manufacturers, that means growth must now come from share gain or geographic expansion, particularly into fast-growing regions like Southeast Asia, the Middle East and North Africa (MENA), and Latin America.
But entering these markets successfully requires localising value propositions and working with distributors who understand IVF workflows and regulatory constraints.
Legal and ethical oversight is tightening
Questions about embryo selection, long-term storage, and artificial intelligence (AI) in diagnostics are under increased scrutiny.
For manufacturers, this raises the bar on traceability, audit readiness, and labeling compliance.
Products now need to include support for standard operating procedures (SOPs), as well as detailed logging and audit trails.
These are no longer differentiators—they are minimum requirements.
Patient experience has become a key decision factor
Clinics are under pressure to not only deliver outcomes but also reduce the emotional and cognitive burden on patients.
Devices that simplify communication, reduce the number of steps in a procedure, and help patients understand “what’s next” are increasingly favored.
Clear interfaces, intuitive indicators, and minimal user intervention all contribute to better adoption.
Clinic consolidation is shifting how buying decisions are made
Independent clinics are being replaced or absorbed by multi-site groups (Eg. US Fertility or IVIRMA, owned by KKR).
These groups prioritise enterprise-style purchasing: standardised protocols, centralised training, measurable return on investment (ROI), and clear service levels.
Manufacturers that can offer SOP kits, multi-site onboarding, and enterprise-level value metrics will have a distinct advantage.
Technology alone no longer drives differentiation
Automation, AI, microfluidics, smart incubation systems, and digital integration are becoming standard.
The key to winning adoption now lies in reproducibility, data quality, interoperability, and auditability—not just product specifications.
Clinics expect devices that integrate easily with their digital systems and produce consistent results across different settings.
Each of these shifts presents a challenge, but also a roadmap.
Cost, regulation, technology, and buyer behavior are all converging toward a more structured and evidence-driven IVF market.
Manufacturers who address these realities in their design, pricing, and commercial execution will be best positioned to scale.
Clinical and Technological Frontiers Highlighted at ESHRE 2025
Beyond the market dynamics, ESHRE 2025 spotlighted several areas of clinical innovation that are directly shaping device and diagnostics development.
These themes are not theoretical—they are influencing purchasing, adoption, and regulatory expectations now.
Ovarian stimulation protocols are being rethought As clinics aim for personalisation and patient comfort, the need for smarter diagnostics and more flexible drug delivery systems is growing.
Biomarkers that can predict ovarian reserve and treatment response are informing stimulation protocols, making room for devices that adapt to individual profiles.
At the same time, there is a clear trend toward mild stimulation protocols, which create demand for less-invasive monitoring tools and delivery systems that are intuitive, reliable, and easy to train on.
The ongoing refinement of protocols using gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) antagonists reinforces the need for workflow-agnostic solutions—those that can fit into varying cycles without adding complexity.
Embryo selection is moving well beyond morphology
Objective, evidence-backed methods are replacing subjective scoring.
One major area of interest is AI-supported time-lapse imaging, which offers the potential to assess embryo viability in a more standardised and reproducible way.
However, clinics are demanding validated tools—classified appropriately as software as a medical device (SaMD), with integration capabilities and clean clinical evidence.
In parallel, non-invasive preimplantation genetic testing (niPGT) is gaining momentum.
Media capable of capturing cell-free DNA (cfDNA), paired with ultra-sensitive genetic testing platforms, could redefine embryo selection workflows.
This is not a future trend—it’s a present R&D priority.
Manufacturers need to plan both the evidence and regulatory strategy from the outset.
Metabolomics and biomarker analysis of culture media are also being explored, particularly where kits can offer clear utility and fit easily into existing lab infrastructure.
Implantation remains a key bottleneck
Even with viable embryos, successful transfer remains challenging.
There is growing interest in non-invasive endometrial diagnostics that can assess uterine receptivity without disrupting workflow.
The market demands tools that are specific, reproducible, and easy to use.
Meanwhile, catheter design continues to influence both outcomes and patient experience.
Ergonomics, atraumatic placement, and consistent delivery are still core drivers of successful transfers.
While less discussed in marketing, this area remains a top priority for clinical users and therefore deserves more innovation attention.
Taken together, these frontiers point toward a product development path that favors integration over novelty, reproducibility over experimentation, and real-world usability over theoretical performance.
It is not just what your device does—it is how it fits into the day-to-day life of clinics under pressure.
Regulatory and Market Access: Build It In, Not On
Global regulatory expectations are rising, and shortcuts are closing.
Product teams can no longer afford to treat compliance as a post-development task. It must be embedded from Day 0.
For software and AI-based tools, classification is tightening across the United States, European Union, and China.
This means developers must create full validation plans early, align endpoints with regulatory expectations, and document cybersecurity and data governance practices before launch.
Post-market surveillance and post-market clinical follow-up are not optional; they need to be built into the development process.
Culture media and reagent products are under increased scrutiny from regulations like the European Union’s Medical Device Regulation (MDR) and In Vitro Diagnostic Regulation (IVDR).
Manufacturers must establish robust quality systems, ensure all labeling is complete and language-appropriate, and be ready to implement unique device identification requirements in every target market.
For connected lab devices, regulatory bodies expect more than just functionality.
They now require detailed documentation of data interoperability, security protocols, and integration capabilities.
Manufacturers should design clean application programming interfaces (APIs) and seamless connectors for hospital and laboratory data systems to make compliance easier—not harder—for clinics.
A practical checklist for manufacturers:
- Confirm software classification and plan validation early for each market.
- Create templates for traceability, labeling, audit logs, and PMS/PMCF.
- Implement cybersecurity and data protection frameworks from Day 0.
- Ensure unique device identification (UDI) compliance for each geography.
- Offer clear integration documents for lab systems (no assumptions).
Strategic Focus Areas for IVF Device and Diagnostics Manufacturers
- Balance cost and innovation
Demonstrate lower total cost of ownership through real-world data. Show how your product reduces maintenance, training time, or consumable use. - Support with evidence, not claims
Build prospective, multi-site clinical studies. Prepare audit-ready documentation: instructions for use, labeling, traceability, and surveillance templates. - Integrate digital and physical
Provide open, secure APIs. Ensure fast and simple onboarding for embryologists and nurses. Focus on reducing clicks, errors, and delays. - Refine embryo selection strategy
Align product claims with validated inputs—whether AI models, cfDNA media, or metabolomic markers. Monitor data drift and revalidate regularly. - Improve uterine receptivity and transfer tools
Support claims with performance data (e.g. time to placement, consistency). Offer quick training modules to accelerate adoption. - Embed regulatory design
Maintain a live matrix of requirements per SKU and market. Don’t delay planning for UDI, cybersecurity, PMS/PMCF. - Sell to enterprise buyers
Offer group-level SOP kits, ROI calculators, and centralised onboarding. Provide remote diagnostics and clear SLAs to reduce downtime. - Speed up market entry through smarter distribution
Use IVF-experienced distributors with proven regulatory capabilities. Shorten time to first order by removing the guesswork.
Key Takeaways
- Total cost of ownership is now the key metric—design around it.
- Patient workflows and clinic processes must be simplified.
- Reproducibility and integration matter more than specs.
- Plan evidence generation around the claims you want to make.
- Prepare for audits with full traceability and post-market tools.
- Offer group-ready commercial packages for multi-site chains.
- Match each market with a localised regulatory strategy.
- Choose distributors who understand both IVF and compliance.
FinDBest IVF: Your Partner in Global Expansion
These insights from ESHRE 2025, as compiled by Circular Communications, offer a compelling glimpse into the future of fertility treatment.
For medical device manufacturers, these trends are direct signals for where to focus R&D, innovation, and market entry efforts.
At FinDBest IVF, we specialise in helping medical device manufacturers navigate the complex global regulatory landscape.
Whether you’re developing cutting-edge AI for embryo selection, next-generation culture media, or advanced cryopreservation devices, we can help you:
- Find regulatory-savvy distributors and license holders.
- Identify partners who understand country-specific timelines and dossier formats.
- Expand globally, faster — with fewer surprises.
Credits
- Original, full report by Circular Communications
- Shared on Linkedin by Georg Griesinger
News
EU committee warns of women’s health ‘blind spot’

An EU committee has backed a report warning of systemic inequalities in women’s health research, diagnosis and treatment across Europe.
The European Parliament’s Committee on Women’s Rights and Gender Equality approved the report, which was initiated by Renew Europe.
Women remain under-represented in medical research and clinical trials.
Around 72 per cent of drug trials do not provide data separated by sex and gender, while only five per cent of global research and development funding is dedicated to women’s health.
The report was led by Renew Europe rapporteur Billy Kelleher MEP of Fianna Fáil in Ireland.
It calls for greater investment in women’s health research, stronger inclusion of women in clinical trials and gender-sensitive diagnostics and treatments, particularly for endometriosis, menopause and cardiovascular disease.
Kelleher, first vice-president of Renew Europe, said: “Women’s health remains one of medicine’s biggest blind spots.
“When research, clinical trials and medical data fail to reflect women’s experiences, the result is poorer diagnosis, treatment and care.”
The report also calls for improved access to sexual and reproductive healthcare, including follow-up to the successful European Citizens’ Initiative “My Voice, My Choice”.
Its recommendations include better support for women’s physical and mental health and access to high-quality care throughout pregnancy, childbirth and the postnatal period, free from discrimination.
It also highlights additional healthcare barriers faced by LGBTQI+ people and women in marginalised communities or vulnerable situations.
Kelleher said: “This report is about closing those gaps and ensuring that women’s health is recognised as a core measure of the quality and fairness of our healthcare systems.”
By placing women’s health higher on the political agenda, the report aims to support the implementation of the EU Gender Equality Strategy and shape future European health policies.
A final vote by the European Parliament is expected in September 2026.
Insight
W Group reveal two-stage programme for Women’s Health Week Europe 2026

Women’s Health Week Europe 2026 has released its full programme ahead of the October event at The Emirates Stadium in London on 7–8 October, with 700+ senior decision-makers and 80+ speakers confirmed across what will be the organisation’s most ambitious edition to date.
For the first time, the event will run across two dedicated stages, each built around a distinct set of questions facing the women’s health industry.
The Global Stage takes on the macro forces shaping the sector: where capital is flowing, how AI is transforming diagnosis and treatment, the gender data gap, wearable technology, stigmatised markets, and the policy landscape across Europe.
Confirmed speakers include Merete Clausen (EIF), Frida Polli (MIT), Nichole Young-Lin (Google), Alison Cave (MHRA), Emily Darlington MP, Kerry Buckley (Boots), Tim Davis (LSEG), Henriette Hessen (Verdane), Hillary Ball (Atomico), and Christine Hockley (British Business Bank).
The Scale Stage runs in parallel, focused on execution: how to navigate regulatory approval pathways, survive the valley of death, build the evidence stack that wins payers and partners, implement AI into a women’s health business, and position for acquisition. Sessions include a reverse pitch format, in which corporates and investors pitch to founders, and a founder’s guide to getting acquired.
The programme also includes two Pitch competitions, one per day, across the Consumer & Tech and Medical Devices & Therapeutics categories, with 16 finalists competing on the mainstage in front of the full delegate audience.
Every session is case study-driven, with speakers selected on the basis of having lived the problem they are on stage to solve.
Women’s Health Week Europe 2026 takes place 7–8 October at The Emirates Stadium, London. The full programme is available now.
View the 2026 programme here
Pre-agenda pricing ends 26 June
Tickets are currently available at pre-agenda pricing, with savings of up to £600 off standard pricing. The deadline is midnight on Friday 26 June. After that, prices go up.
Secure your place: https://wplatform.co/summits/womens-health-week-europe-2026?utm_source=advocacy&utm_medium=ext_email&utm_campaign=whw-europe-26-femtech-world#tickets
Also at The Emirates: Women’s Sport Summit 2026
The day before WHW Europe, on 6 October, The Emirates Stadium will also host the inaugural Women’s Sport Summit, a dedicated one-day event bringing together 400+ attendees from across sport, business, and investment. Focused on the commercial side of women’s sport, the Summit covers the full sports cycle: money, product, and market. Where women’s sport means business.
Insight
Most IVF add-ons not backed by reliable evidence, research finds

Most IVF add-ons lack reliable evidence, with benefits either absent or inconclusive, the largest review of its kind has found.
More than 70 per cent of IVF patients in the UK, Australia and New Zealand reportedly pay for one or more additional treatments.
However, researchers found that most of the procedures, medicines and techniques had no effect on fertility or were backed by limited or low-quality evidence.
Unproven add-ons can also lead to false hope, greater financial strain and unnecessary medical procedures at an already difficult time for patients.
Dr Sarah Lensen, of the University of Melbourne, said: “In many countries, infertility care is largely provided by private clinics where IVF is highly commercialised, and some add-ons are extremely expensive.
“Our review finds a lack of evidence that most of the IVF add-ons we assessed provide any benefit to patients. Unproven add-ons can lead to false hope, greater financial strain and unnecessary medical procedures at what already can be a very difficult time for patients.”
Researchers said concerns have grown in recent years about potentially untrustworthy randomised controlled trials in reproductive medicine, including studies of IVF add-ons.
The team set out to review the effectiveness and safety of 10 commonly offered add-ons using trustworthy studies.
Researchers initially identified 157 potentially eligible randomised controlled trials but excluded 72 because of concerns about their reliability.
Randomised controlled trials compare treatments by assigning participants to different groups, helping researchers assess whether an intervention causes a particular outcome.
The team combined data from the remaining 85 trials in a meta-analysis, which brings together findings from several studies.
The review found no effect on fertility or inconclusive evidence for seven of the 10 add-ons examined.
These included acupuncture, which involves inserting thin needles into points on the body, and corticosteroids, medicines that reduce inflammation and suppress immune activity.
Endometrial receptivity testing was also not backed by reliable evidence. The procedure involves taking a sample from the lining of the womb to examine patterns of gene activity.
Another add-on was intralipid infusion, which delivers a fat-containing liquid into the bloodstream.
Researchers separately examined injections of platelet-rich plasma into the ovaries and infusions of platelet-rich plasma into the womb.
Platelet-rich plasma is made from a patient’s blood and contains a high concentration of platelets, which play a role in healing.
The seventh treatment was pre-implantation genetic testing for aneuploidy, which examines embryos to check whether they have the expected number of chromosomes.
The review found only weak evidence of a possible benefit from three other add-ons.
EmbryoGlue, an embryo transfer medium containing hyaluronic acid, may increase the probability of pregnancy and live birth. However, the evidence on live birth rates was not considered robust.
Endometrial scratching, a minor procedure that deliberately disturbs the lining of the womb, may also increase the probability of pregnancy and live birth.
Physiological intracytoplasmic sperm injection, known as PICSI, selects sperm based on their ability to bind to hyaluronic acid. Weak evidence suggested it may reduce the risk of miscarriage.
Lensen said: “There is widespread misinformation about IVF add-ons with private clinic websites and patient forums on social media – major information sources for patients – often overstating the benefits and omitting the costs and risks of add-ons.
“IVF clinics and clinicians should carefully consider whether it is appropriate to offer unproven add-ons, as their availability is often perceived by patients as implicit endorsement of benefit.”
Menopause4 weeks agoPerimenopause misinformation ‘putting women at risk’
Entrepreneur4 weeks agoWomen’s Health Innovation Summit opens submissions for 2026 Innovation Showcase
Insight3 weeks agoBritish women among angriest in Europe, health survey reveals
News4 weeks agoWomen still being failed when they reach menopause, experts say
Menopause2 weeks agoApple Health adds menopause and perimenopause tracking
Menopause4 weeks agoSweden eyes domestic production of oestrogen patches amid menopause treatment shortage
News2 weeks agoFemtech World Awards 2026: Winners revealed
News4 weeks agoThree menopause innovators shortlisted for Femtech World Award













