An Ohio couple welcomes a baby boy from a nearly 31-year-old frozen 
		embryo
		
		[August 02, 2025] 
		By KIMBERLEE KRUESI 
		
		A baby boy born last week to an Ohio couple developed from an embryo 
		that had been frozen for more than 30 years in what is believed to be 
		the longest storage time before a birth. 
		 
		In what's known as embryo adoption, Lindsey and Tim Pierce used a 
		handful of donated embryos that have been frozen since 1994 in pursuit 
		of having a child after fighting infertility for years. Their son was 
		born Saturday from an embryo that had been in storage for 11,148 days, 
		which the Pierces’ doctor says sets a record. 
		 
		It’s a concept that has been around since the 1990s but is gaining 
		traction as some fertility clinics and advocates, often 
		Christian-centered, oppose discarding leftover embryos because of their 
		belief that life begins at or around conception and that all embryos 
		deserve to be treated like children who need a home. 
		 
		“I felt all along that these three little hopes, these little embryos, 
		deserved to live just like my daughter did,” said Linda Archerd, 62, who 
		donated her embryos to the Pierces. 
		 
		Just about 2% of births in the U.S. are the result of in vitro 
		fertilization, and an even smaller fraction involve donated embryos. 
		 
		However, medical experts estimate about 1.5 million frozen embryos are 
		currently being stored throughout the country, with many of those in 
		limbo as parents wrestle with what to do with their leftover embryos 
		created in IVF labs. 
		
		
		  
		
		Further complicating the topic is a 2024 Alabama Supreme Court decision 
		that said that frozen embryos have the legal status of children. State 
		leaders have since devised a temporary solution shielding clinics from 
		liability stemming from that ruling, though questions linger about 
		remaining embryos. 
		 
		Archerd says she turned to IVF in 1994. Back then, the ability to 
		freeze, thaw and transfer embryos was making key progress and opening 
		the door for hopeful parents to create more embryos and increase their 
		chances of a successful transfer. 
		 
		She wound up with four embryos and initially hoped to use them all. But 
		after the birth of her daughter, Archerd and her husband divorced, 
		disrupting her timeline for having more children. 
		 
		As the years turned into decades, Archerd said she was wracked with 
		guilt about what to do with the embryos as storage fees continued to 
		rise. 
		
		Eventually, she found Snowflakes, a division of Nightlight Christian 
		Adoptions, which offers open adoptions to donors from people like 
		Archerd. She was also able to set preferences for what families would 
		adopt her embryos. 
		 
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			  “I wanted to be a part of this 
			baby’s life,” she said. “And I wanted to know the adopting parents.” 
			 
			The process was tricky, requiring Archerd to contact her initial 
			fertility doctor in Oregon and dig through paper records to get the 
			proper documentation for the donation. The embryos then had to be 
			shipped from Oregon to the Pierces’ doctor in Tennessee. The clinic, 
			Rejoice Fertility in Knoxville, refuses to discard frozen embryos 
			and has become known for handling embryos stored in outdated and 
			older containers. 
			 
			Of the three donated embryos the Pierces received from Archerd, one 
			didn’t make the thaw. Two were transferred to Lindsey Pierce’s womb, 
			but just one successfully implanted. 
			 
			According to Dr. John David Gordon, the transfer of the nearly 
			31-year-old embryo marks the longest-frozen embryo to result in a 
			live birth. He would know: Gordon says his clinic assisted in the 
			previous record, when Lydia and Timothy Ridgeway were born from 
			embryos frozen for 30 years, or 10,905 days. 
			 
			“I think that these stories catch the imagination,” Gordon said. 
			“But I think they also provide a little bit of a cautionary tale to 
			say: Why are these embryos sitting in storage? You know, why do we 
			have this problem?” 
			 
			In a statement, Lindsey and Tim Pierce said the clinic’s support was 
			just what they needed. 
			 
			“We didn’t go into this thinking about records — we just wanted to 
			have a baby,” Lindsey Pierce said. 
			 
			For Archerd, the donation process has been an emotional roller 
			coaster. Relief that her embryos finally found a home, sadness it 
			couldn’t be with her and a little anxiety about what the future 
			holds next, with possibly meeting the Pierces and the baby in 
			person. 
			 
			“I’m hoping that they’re going to send pictures,” she said, noting 
			that the parents have already sent several after the birth. “I’d 
			love to meet them some day. That would be a dream come true to meet 
			— meet them and the baby.” 
			
			
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