Tue. Jan 21st, 2025
alert-–-katie-price,-46,-is-left-gutted-as-she’s-told-she’s-heading-towards-the-menopause-amid-tough-ivf-journey-and-reveals-fears-her-then-fiance-carl-woods,-35,-would-dump-her-for-a-younger-womanAlert – Katie Price, 46, is left gutted as she’s told she’s heading towards the menopause amid tough IVF journey and reveals fears her then-fiancé Carl Woods, 35, would dump her for a younger woman

Katie Price was left gutted after being informed that she was heading towards the menopause as she tried for IVF with former fiancé Carl Woods on her documentary, Making Babies.

The Channel 4 show, which was filmed in 2023 before she split with Carl, documents her and Carl’s fertility treatment journey as they planned to have another baby. 

The former couple had been trying to fall pregnant for three years, however, they were dealt a crushing blow when a fertility expert told a then 45-year-old Katie that she only had ‘a couple of awake eggs’ and that her body was showing signs of menopause.

Breaking the news to the pair during the first episode on Monday, gynecologist Carole Gilling-Smith informed them that they had ‘less than one percent’ of falling pregnant using Katie’s own eggs, adding that it she was ‘unlikely’ to produce a ‘healthy egg’. 

And while the situation was a crushing blow to the then couple, Katie was then seen panicking that Carl would dump her amid the fact that she was facing the menopause ‘within a year or two’ and might not be able to give him a child naturally. 

The mother-of-five exclaimed: ‘He probably won’t want to be with me now anyway.’

Katie Price was left gutted after being informed that she was heading towards the menopause as she tried for IVF with former fiancé Carl Woods on her documentary, Making Babies

Katie Price was left gutted after being informed that she was heading towards the menopause as she tried for IVF with former fiancé Carl Woods on her documentary, Making Babies

The Channel 4 show, which was filmed in 2023 before she split with Carl, documents her and Carl's fertility treatment journey as they planned to have another baby

The Channel 4 show, which was filmed in 2023 before she split with Carl, documents her and Carl’s fertility treatment journey as they planned to have another baby

Speaking to the camera, she added: ‘But I now am paranoid that he won’t want to be with me because he’ll want a kid, and he’d think I’m so much grief that he’d go and get someone younger and set up a family. That’s what I think.’

As Carl slammed her negativity as ‘insanity’, Katie went on to say how ‘paranoid’ she was, remarking: ‘The door is closed on me!’ 

Fertility expert Carole then later admitted that the news was a ‘big blow’ for Katie (now 46) as she told how ‘the first sign of ageing is coming from her ovaries’.

She also shared that when women get news such as Katie’s, they often get the feeling that they are no longer attractive. 

Despite being given such a low chance of producing a healthy egg, a determined Katie later informed Carole that she wanted to go ahead with the egg retrieval.

The documentary then sees Katie undergo a procedure to retrieve her egg, with the star later delighted when two are collected.

And while at the time the couple were excited at the prospect of having a baby, they went on to split mid-filming, while the IVF was ultimately unsuccessful.

It comes as Katie revealed she knew ‘deep down’ ex Carl wasn’t ‘the one’ despite the pair undergoing fertility treatment as she reflected their ‘turbulent’ relationship.  

They were dealt a crushing blow when a fertility expert told a then 45-year-old Katie that she only had 'a couple of awake eggs' and that her body was showing signs of menopause

They were dealt a crushing blow when a fertility expert told a then 45-year-old Katie that she only had ‘a couple of awake eggs’ and that her body was showing signs of menopause

Katie was then seen panicking that Carl would dump her amid the fact that she was facing the menopause 'within a year or two' and might not be able to give him a child naturally

Katie was then seen panicking that Carl would dump her amid the fact that she was facing the menopause ‘within a year or two’ and might not be able to give him a child naturally

'Now am paranoid that he won't want to be with me because he'll want a kid, and he'd think I'm so much grief that he'd go and get someone younger and set up a family. That's what I think'

‘Now am paranoid that he won’t want to be with me because he’ll want a kid, and he’d think I’m so much grief that he’d go and get someone younger and set up a family. That’s what I think’

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Carl is said to be furious that their baby documentary is airing after their split, with friends telling The Sun: ‘Carl is embarrassed that this is being aired after their messy break-up.

‘He has always claimed she cheated on him and he needed therapy after their relationship. He doesn’t want any reminders of Katie as he spent a long time forgetting that period of life and this brings it all up.’

have contacted Carl’s representatives for a comment. 

But after splitting from Carl mid-filming, Katie admitted she ‘was trying to make a relationship work that she knew wasn’t right for her’.

Katie, who continued fertility counselling solo, admitted a ‘weight lifted off her shoulders’ shortly after her relationship ended with Carl. 

She said: ‘I feel such a weight has come off my shoulders (after counselling)’, while also admitting how ‘blessed’ she is for her five children.

Despite being given such a low chance of producing a healthy egg, a determined Katie later informed Carole that she wanted to go ahead with the egg retrieval

Despite being given such a low chance of producing a healthy egg, a determined Katie later informed Carole that she wanted to go ahead with the egg retrieval

The documentary then sees Katie undergo a procedure to retrieve her egg, with the star later delighted when two are collected

The documentary then sees Katie undergo a procedure to retrieve her egg, with the star later delighted when two are collected

Katie is a proud mum to son Harvey, 22, with former footballer Dwight York, son Junior, 19, daughter Princess, 17, with her first husband Peter Andre, and son Jett, 10, and daughter Bunny, nine, with ex-husband Kieran Hayler. 

‘I’ve had a turbulent time, but I’ve reset the button’, Katie added.

In the documentary Katie also said she’s ‘exhausted with relationships’ amid recent rumours she’s split from boyfriend JJ Slater, 31.

She said: ‘I’m exhausted with relationships, when I look back at how the IVF journey was, a lot of times I wasn’t happy.’

HOW DOES IVF WORK?

In-vitro fertilisation, known as IVF, is a medical procedure in which a woman has an already-fertilised egg inserted into her womb to become pregnant.

It is used when couples are unable to conceive naturally, and a sperm and egg are removed from their bodies and combined in a laboratory before the embryo is inserted into the woman.

Once the embryo is in the womb, the pregnancy should continue as normal.

The procedure can be done using eggs and sperm from a couple or those from donors. 

Guidelines from the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) recommends that IVF should be offered on the NHS to women under 43 who have been trying to conceive through regular unprotected sex for two years.

People can also pay for IVF privately, which costs an average of £3,348 for a single cycle, according to figures published in January 2018, and there is no guarantee of success.

The NHS says success rates for women under 35 are about 29 per cent, with the chance of a successful cycle reducing as they age.

Around eight million babies are thought to have been born due to IVF since the first ever case, British woman Louise Brown, was born in 1978.

Chances of success

The success rate of IVF depends on the age of the woman undergoing treatment, as well as the cause of the infertility (if it’s known).

Younger women are more likely to have a successful pregnancy. 

IVF isn’t usually recommended for women over the age of 42 because the chances of a successful pregnancy are thought to be too low.

Between 2014 and 2016 the percentage of IVF treatments that resulted in a live birth was:

29 per cent for women under 35

23 per cent for women aged 35 to 37

15 per cent for women aged 38 to 39

9 per cent for women aged 40 to 42

3 per cent for women aged 43 to 44

2 per cent for women aged over 44

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