A Shanghai professional completed fertility preservation in Hong Kong around age 30 with AVORELIS support. At 35, she began to seriously consider becoming a mother independently. She did not want to make a rushed relationship decision, and after considering pregnancy risks and career continuity, she chose a pregnancy arrangement outside her own body.
Shanghai independent woman
Hong Kong egg freezing, U.S. embryo creation and Armenia pregnancy coordination.

She preserved choice first, then reconnected it to a cross-border plan.
AVORELIS Action Log
- Reviewed Hong Kong egg-storage records and release conditions.
- Coordinated Hong Kong storage, a California fertility clinic and transportation providers.
- Helped the client understand compliant U.S. sperm-bank profile structures.
- Coordinated IVF, embryo culture and PGT at the U.S. clinic.
- Arranged embryo transport to Armenia for pregnancy coordination.
- Aligned medical, transport, legal and post-birth document timelines.
What this case shows
Egg freezing preserves possibility. It does not automatically create a future project. When the client restarts family planning years later, the stored eggs must re-enter today’s medical, legal, resource and document system.
This anonymized project file is used to illustrate client-side coordination and project management. Medical decisions should be made by physicians and medical teams; legal and document matters should be reviewed by qualified counsel and relevant authorities. Outcomes vary by client situation.
A first meeting is not a sales close.
The first conversation is used to clarify family structure, medical information, donor or carrier needs, budget boundaries and post-birth objectives before any country or program is recommended.
