This deep dive is not a medical recommendation. It is a framework for thinking — designed to help you approach the decisions ahead from a place of clarity rather than panic. Every woman's situation is different, every uterus is different, and every path forward will look different. Your specialist team provides the medical guidance; this is here to help you hold the bigger picture.
One of the most overwhelming things about Asherman's is that it can put you in decision-making territory long before you feel ready to be there. Suddenly you are hearing terms like "egg retrieval" and "gestational carrier" and "donor conception" — often in the same appointment where you've just received a difficult scan result. The cognitive and emotional load is enormous.
This deep dive is designed to slow that down. To give you a clear map of the paths available, the real questions to ask about each one, and a framework for working out — over time, with your partner, with your specialist — which direction is right for you.
Before You Decide Anything
The most important thing I can tell you is this: you do not have to decide anything today.
The urgency that infertility creates — the sense that time is running out, that every cycle that passes is a loss, that you need to move now — is real, but it is also sometimes distorted. Decisions made from panic tend to be decisions we later regret. Decisions made from as much clarity as we can access tend to hold up better, even when they're hard.
Before you decide anything significant, give yourself permission to:
- Get a second opinion on your diagnosis and prognosis
- Take a short break from active decision-making if you need it
- Sit with each option long enough to imagine actually doing it — not just thinking about it abstractly
- Talk to someone who has been down each path you're considering
- Change your mind as many times as you need to
Path 1 — IVF With Your Own Eggs
This is usually the first path explored after Asherman's treatment — attempting to achieve pregnancy with your own eggs implanted in your own uterus after adhesion removal. Success depends significantly on the severity of original adhesions, the quality of hysteroscopic treatment, endometrial receptivity post-surgery, and your ovarian reserve.
The 2024 data on IVF outcomes after Asherman's shows a wide range of success rates depending on severity — from comparable-to-population rates for mild cases to significantly reduced rates for severe cases. This is where your ERA, EMMA, and ALICE testing (covered in Chapter 5) becomes particularly valuable — optimising your implantation window can meaningfully improve outcomes.
Key questions to work through with your specialist:
- What does my endometrial lining look like post-treatment, and is it likely to support implantation?
- Has ERA testing been recommended for me, and if not, why not?
- What is my ovarian reserve, and how does that affect timing?
- What is a realistic success rate for my specific situation — not the general population average?
- How many cycles would you recommend before reassessing the path?
Path 2 — Donor Eggs
Donor egg IVF uses eggs from another woman (anonymous or known donor) fertilised with your partner's sperm (or donor sperm), with the resulting embryo transferred to your uterus. If your uterus can carry a pregnancy — even if your ovarian reserve is reduced or your own eggs are not viable — donor eggs can be a powerful option.
Live birth rates with donor eggs are generally higher than with own eggs, because donor egg success rates are tied to the donor's age and egg quality rather than the recipient's. This pathway keeps you as the person who carries and births the baby — which matters to many women.
The emotional work donor eggs require:
This path involves a genuine grief process — the letting go of genetic connection through the maternal line. Research consistently shows that this grief is real and worth processing, not bypassing. The women who navigate donor egg conception most successfully tend to be the ones who did the emotional work beforehand — through counselling, through honest conversation with their partner, through connecting with others who have travelled this path — rather than trying to "just get on with it."
The genetic connection question is worth sitting with honestly, not rushing past. Some women find that once a pregnancy is underway and particularly once a baby is in their arms, the genetic question fades significantly. Others find it persists. Both are valid experiences, and knowing which is more likely for you is useful information before you commit to the path.
Path 3 — Surrogacy
Surrogacy is relevant for women whose uterus cannot carry a pregnancy to term — either because of severe Asherman's that has not been fully resolved, because of significant risk of complications (placenta accreta, for example), or because of recurrent pregnancy loss associated with the condition. In gestational surrogacy, the embryo (your eggs + partner's sperm, or donor eggs) is transferred to the surrogate's uterus. The surrogate is not the genetic mother.
In Australia: Altruistic surrogacy is legal in most states; commercial surrogacy is not. This means finding a surrogate willing to carry without payment — a process that typically takes 1-3 years and is usually done through personal connections or surrogacy support organisations. International commercial surrogacy is legally complex for Australians. This is worth legal advice specific to your state.
What surrogacy actually involves:
- Finding a surrogate — through personal networks, support groups, or matching organisations
- Legal agreements — binding arrangements covering all eventualities
- Medical and psychological screening for both surrogate and intended parents
- IVF for embryo creation (using your eggs or donor eggs)
- The emotional complexity of watching someone else carry your baby
- The relationship with your surrogate — which can be one of the most meaningful of your life
Path 4 — Child-Free Living
Child-free living after Asherman's is not the same as giving up. It is a path that some women choose — sometimes after exhausting other options, sometimes earlier when the cost of treatment (financial, physical, relational, emotional) outweighs what they feel they can give — and it is a valid, full, beautiful life.
This path is rarely discussed without a kind of hushed pity that it doesn't deserve. The research on wellbeing in child-free women is more nuanced than the cultural narrative suggests — many women who reach genuine peace with child-free living report high life satisfaction, deep relationships, and a sense of freedom and purpose they didn't expect. The key word is genuine peace — and that takes time and processing to reach. It is not the same as resignation.
If this is a path you are considering — or if you find yourself here because other paths have closed — please know that what you are building is still a life worth building. The love you would have put into parenting does not disappear. It redirects. Into relationships, into work, into community, into the care you take of yourself and the people around you.
Questions to Ask Yourself
Across all paths, there are a set of deeper questions worth sitting with — ideally with your partner, ideally with time and without urgency. Research on fertility decision-making identifies six dimensions that matter most to people making these choices:
| Dimension | The question it raises |
|---|---|
| Effectiveness | What are the realistic success rates for my specific situation on each path? |
| Emotional burden | What will this ask of me emotionally — and do I have the reserves for it right now? |
| Physical burden | What does my body need to go through, and am I prepared for that? |
| Time | How long will this path take, and how does that fit with where I am in life? |
| Cost | What is the financial reality, and is it sustainable for us? |
| Genetic parentage | How important is genetic connection — to me, to my partner, to the child we'd raise? |
These dimensions interact. A path that is medically most effective may be emotionally most costly. A path that preserves genetic connection may require more time than another. Making a decision that you can live with — not just a decision that optimises one variable — means holding all six in view.
There Is No Wrong Path
The most important thing I can leave you with in this deep dive is this: there is no objectively right path. There is only the path that is right for you — your body, your relationship, your values, your life.
Women who pursue IVF and succeed are not braver than women who choose surrogacy. Women who choose child-free living are not less deserving than women who adopt. The path you choose is not a reflection of how much you wanted this or how hard you tried. It is simply the path that was available to you and that you chose with the information and the resources and the emotional capacity you had at the time.
Whatever path you are on — or whatever combination of paths you travel in sequence — you are doing it as well as you can. That is enough.