Recurrent Miscarriage
Repeated pregnancy loss is heartbreaking — but a thorough workup often finds a treatable cause.
Recurrent miscarriage — usually defined as two or more consecutive pregnancy losses — carries a heavy emotional weight. It can feel isolating, but you are not alone, and it is not usually your fault.
Importantly, a careful, structured evaluation identifies a treatable cause in many couples. Even where no single cause is found, supportive care and close monitoring improve the chance of a successful pregnancy next time.
How Recurrent Miscarriage affects fertility
Recurrent miscarriage can stem from chromosomal factors, the shape of the uterus, hormonal or clotting disorders, or immune factors. Identifying which applies to you is the key to the right treatment.
How we diagnose & treat it
We follow a structured workup — genetic testing, molecular diagnostics, hormonal and clotting screens, and uterine assessment — with input from genetic counsellors where helpful.
Treatment is then tailored to what we find: this may include genetic testing of embryos (PGT) to transfer chromosomally healthy embryos, correcting uterine or hormonal factors, or specific medication in subsequent pregnancies.
Frequently asked
Many guidelines investigate after two losses, and we may start sooner depending on your age and history. You don't have to wait to ask for support.
Most couples with recurrent miscarriage go on to have a healthy baby. A thorough workup and the right care meaningfully improve the odds.
Talk to a specialist about Recurrent Miscarriage
Book a confidential consultation for a clear diagnosis and a plan tailored to you.
The information on this page is general and educational, and is not a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Fertility outcomes vary from person to person and depend on age, diagnosis and other individual factors; no result is guaranteed. Any success figure shown is a beta-hCG positive (pregnancy-test) rate per embryo transfer at our Solapur centre, which is not a live-birth rate. Please consult our specialists for advice specific to you.