Early Access

IVF gives you data.
Avela gives you clarity.

Your labs, your cycles, your history. Connected by intelligence that knows your full picture, not just your last result.

Free to join. No spam.

You're on the list. We'll be in touch when early access opens.
Avela for Maya R.
FET Prep
Day 8 of estrogen priming
E2
187
pg/mL
P4
0.3
ng/mL
LH
1.2
mIU/mL
Avela insight
E2 at 187 on day 8 is tracking well for where lining check typically falls. P4 at 0.3 confirms suppression is holding. LH at 1.2 is worth watching — a premature LH surge during estrogen priming is the main reason cycles get cancelled at this stage, and your RE will be looking at this at your next monitoring visit.

What Avela does

Your labs, your history, your protocol, interpreted together.

From your first baseline through every result that follows, Avela understands where you are and what it means.

01
Lab interpretation in context of your history
Not reference ranges. Not "is this normal." Your AMH trend, your protocol, your prior cycles — interpreted together so you can see what your full picture actually means.
02
Cycle tracking that tells you what today's result actually means
Whether you're in a retrieval cycle or a transfer cycle, Avela tracks your medications and appointments alongside your results, so you always know where you are and what's coming next.
03
What comes next, and what's worth asking about
Most patients don't know what options exist until after a failed cycle. Avela surfaces the alternatives, the areas of clinical debate, and the questions worth raising, before you're in the room making decisions.
04
Appointment Prep before every RE visit
It surfaces the questions most worth bringing to your RE before you decide what comes next, grounded in your data, not a generic checklist.

What patients tell us

IVF gives you data. Not enough context to use it.

"

After my first retrieval I found out about a medication other patients were using. If I'd known it existed, I would have asked for it sooner. You want to do everything you can to do fewer rounds.

Patient, 4 retrieval cycles
"

Every single time I've gotten results, I've had to Google it. I would always get the results before I talked to the nurse, so I would just Google everything.

Patient, active retrieval cycle
"

There's so much they don't tell you until after a failure. I didn't know about half the testing, the supplements, any of it. You don't know what to ask for until it's too late.

Patient, 2 retrievals
Appointment Prep

Walk into your next RE visit knowing exactly what to ask.

Avela reviews your labs, your cycle state, and your history, generating a prioritized brief before every appointment so you're not piecing it together in the waiting room.

Appointment Brief FET Review — Dr. Patel
Questions worth raising at your next appointment
1
My LH is at 1.2 on day 8 — what threshold would make you consider cancelling this cycle, and how are you monitoring for a premature surge before my next check?
2
I've had two prior euploid transfers fail with a normal cavity. Have you ruled out a receptivity issue — ERA, ReceptIVA, endometrial biopsy — or is there a reason we haven't gone down that path?
3
My AMH declined 31% between my last two retrievals. Does that change how you're thinking about future protocols?
Avela insight
48 hours after a failed transfer
Three prior euploid failures with a normal uterine cavity shifts the clinical picture toward implantation environment rather than embryo quality. ERA, ReceptIVA, and endometrial biopsy are all worth raising — each targets a different piece of the receptivity picture.

Your data. Your clarity.

Join the waitlist for early access to Avela. We're building with a small group of patients first.

Free to join. We'll reach out when early access opens.

You're on the list. We'll be in touch when early access opens.
Why we built this

Ashley spent three years navigating IVF before welcoming her son. Four retrievals. Five transfers. She made decisions she later wished she'd understood better. She discovered options after cycles she wished she'd known to ask about before. Not because her care was wrong, but because nobody tells you what you don't know to ask.

She didn't need someone to make decisions for her. She needed to understand her own data well enough to make them herself. That tool didn't exist. So she and her best friend Taylor are building it.