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MUNA FERTILITY INC — Fertlo Editorial Review

Independent editorial overview · Atlanta, GA
Photo of Dr. Hannah Ní Bhriain Russell

Dr. Hannah Ní Bhriain Russell, MB BCh BAO, Specialist in Gynaecology & Obstetrics

9 min read
Medically Reviewed
Photo of Prof. Sandro C. Esteves

Prof. Sandro C. Esteves, MD, PhD

Male Infertility & Andrology ANDROFERT Andrology & Human Reproduction Clinic, Campinas, Brazil; Honorary Professor, Aarhus University, Denmark

Last reviewed:

Muna Fertility (Atlanta): A Complete Patient Guide

Atlanta's fertility market is dominated by large, multi-physician practices — Reproductive Biology Associates, ACRM, Emory's academic program — all with decades of established patient volume. Muna Fertility, which opened its doors in 2024, occupies a deliberately different position: a boutique practice founded by a single reproductive endocrinologist who brings both an extraordinary clinical pedigree and the lived experience of a fertility patient to every consultation. That combination is rare in American reproductive medicine, and it has earned Muna Fertility a 4.8-star reputation in a city where patients have no shortage of alternatives. For anyone navigating the fertility clinics in Georgia landscape, Muna is a serious contender that deserves a close look.

The clinic's very name signals its mission. "Muna" is a word from Akum, a language spoken in the Northwest Region of Cameroon, and it translates to My Child. The founder chose it deliberately — it captures both the depth of longing that brings patients through the door and the culture of care she set out to build.

Physicians and Clinical Team

Dr. Karenne Fru, MD, PhD, FACOG is Muna Fertility's founder, Medical Director, and sole reproductive endocrinologist. Her academic and clinical credentials are uncommon even by the high-bar standards of the REI specialty.

Dr. Fru grew up in Bambili, a village in Cameroon's Northwest Region, and immigrated to the United States to pursue higher education with the support of family based in Atlanta. She earned a BA in Biology at Wesleyan College in Macon, Georgia, before matriculating at the Medical College of Georgia (MCG), where she completed both MD and PhD degrees — becoming the first Black MD/PhD graduate in MCG's history. Her doctorate examined reproductive biology, grounding her clinical work in a research-level understanding of ovarian physiology. She then completed her OB/GYN residency at Greenville Hospital System University Medical Center in South Carolina, followed by a fellowship in Reproductive Endocrinology and Infertility at the National Institutes of Health (NIH) — one of the most selective training programs in the field. She is double board-certified in Obstetrics and Gynecology and in Reproductive Endocrinology and Infertility, with more than a decade of experience in the specialty.

Dr. Fru's decision to found Muna Fertility was shaped as much by personal experience as professional expertise. Despite her training, she endured six miscarriages — a reproductive loss that she has discussed publicly as a turning point. Experiencing healthcare as a patient, rather than purely as a physician, clarified for her what was missing: care that treats each person as an individual with a singular story, not a diagnosis to be processed. That insight became the clinical philosophy at Muna Fertility.

Services and Treatments

Muna Fertility offers the full core spectrum of reproductive medicine from its Atlanta location:

In Vitro Fertilization (IVF): Comprehensive IVF cycles — including conventional IVF, intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI), and frozen embryo transfer (FET) — are the centerpiece of the clinical offering. IVF with FET is listed at $18,500, positioning the clinic at a competitive price point relative to larger Atlanta practices where cycle costs frequently exceed $20,000 before medications. For a full breakdown of what the IVF process involves, see our IVF guide.

Intrauterine Insemination (IUI): IUI cycles are available at $1,000 — one of the more affordable starting points for couples and individuals beginning fertility treatment, or those working with donor sperm.

Egg Freezing (Oocyte Cryopreservation): Elective fertility preservation is available at $5,500 for the retrieval cycle. Dr. Fru has spoken extensively about empowering women to take proactive control of their reproductive timelines, and egg freezing is a central pillar of the practice's patient-education mission.

Diagnostic Workup: Sonohysterogram (SHG) and hysterosalpingogram (HSG) are offered in-house, at $500 and $600 respectively, allowing the clinic to conduct foundational uterine and tubal assessments without requiring patients to coordinate with outside imaging facilities.

LGBTQ+ and Non-Traditional Family Building: Inclusive care is an explicit and founding commitment at Muna Fertility, not an afterthought. The clinic welcomes same-sex couples, single parents by choice, and individuals with social infertility needs. Patient feedback specifically highlights that LGBTQ+ families felt "incredibly welcome" and that Dr. Fru took care to acknowledge the distinction between medical and social infertility — a nuance that matters to many LGBTQ+ patients navigating a system historically built around heterosexual couples with medical diagnoses.

Recurrent Pregnancy Loss and Complex Cases: Dr. Fru's personal history with pregnancy loss and her NIH fellowship training make her particularly well-suited for patients with recurrent implantation failure, unexplained infertility, and complicated ovarian or uterine factors.

Laboratory and Success Rates

Muna Fertility is a newer practice, having launched in 2024, which means multi-year CDC/SART cycle outcome data — the standard public benchmark for U.S. IVF programs — is not yet available. Clinics typically require two to three years of reporting before meaningful cohort data appears in the CDC ART Success Rates database. This is a normal feature of any recently established practice, not a red flag; the underlying clinical competence of the physician does not change because a program is new.

For procedures requiring a surgical suite — primarily egg retrievals and embryo transfers — Muna Fertility currently performs these in a shared procedural space with an established Atlanta clinic, a common arrangement for newer boutique practices while dedicated facility buildout proceeds. The embryology laboratory infrastructure associated with that shared arrangement handles the technical culture and cryopreservation work.

Patients can contextualize what realistic outcomes look like by reviewing age-adjusted national benchmarks at the CDC. The most important predictor of success in IVF remains patient age at retrieval; Dr. Fru's NIH training encompasses the full range of ovarian stimulation and embryo development science underpinning those outcome curves.

Patient Experience (4.8 Stars — What Earns It?)

Muna Fertility's 4.8-star rating reflects what a thoughtfully run boutique practice can offer: genuine access to the physician, not just coordinators and nurses. In a specialty where patients frequently cite feeling like a number, the feedback for Dr. Fru converges on a specific set of themes:

Unhurried, direct communication. Patients report that no question is treated as trivial, that Dr. Fru explains the reasoning behind every protocol decision, and that they leave appointments actually understanding their next steps. One patient noted that Dr. Fru is "compassionate and collaborative — always asking your preferences and clearly explaining the pros and cons of every option."

Responsiveness. The clinic's patient communication app receives consistent praise for quick turnaround. Patients report rarely waiting past their scheduled appointment time — a meaningful detail in a field where monitoring cycles require early-morning visits that can ripple into the rest of a workday.

Cultural and personal alignment. Dr. Fru is a Black woman who immigrated from Africa, trained at a historically Black college as an undergraduate, and founded her practice specifically to center marginalized and underserved populations. For Black patients, LGBTQ+ patients, and others who have experienced dismissiveness or inequity in prior healthcare encounters, this context matters. Multiple reviewers describe her care as transformative for patients with complex medical histories who had previously struggled to be heard.

First-cycle outcomes. Several patients report achieving pregnancy on the first treatment attempt, including one patient with PCOS who got pregnant on the first cycle — a testament to individualized protocol selection over standardized approaches.

The clinic is located at 2625 Piedmont Rd NE, Suite 56-302, Atlanta, GA 30324, in the Buckhead/Piedmont area, with convenient parking access.

Considering At-Home Insemination?

Not every fertility journey begins in a clinic. At-home intracervical insemination (ICI) is a lower-cost, private option that suits patients with no known fertility diagnosis — including single parents by choice, same-sex couples, and people who want to try a few cycles before committing to clinical treatment.

At-home insemination kits like those from MakeAMom come with step-by-step instructions designed for donor or partner sperm. Kits are a one-time purchase that can be reused until conception succeeds, require no clinic visit, and arrive in plain, discreet packaging. Many patients use them as a first step while working toward a fertility consultation — or alongside ovulation tracking while they wait for an appointment slot.

If you have a known fertility diagnosis, have been trying for 12 months without success (six months if you're over 35), or your physician has already recommended IUI or IVF, a board-certified reproductive endocrinologist is the right next step.

Insurance and Financing

Georgia has no fertility insurance mandate. Unlike states such as Illinois, Massachusetts, or New Jersey, Georgia places no legal requirement on insurers or employers to cover IVF, IUI, or most other ART services. This means that the majority of patients at any Atlanta fertility clinic — including Muna Fertility — will bear the cost of treatment out of pocket unless their employer voluntarily offers an infertility benefit.

Muna Fertility's published pricing is transparent and competitive:

TreatmentListed Price
IUI$1,000
Egg Freezing$5,500
IVF$14,000
IVF with FET$18,500
Sonohysterogram (SHG)$500
Hysterosalpingogram (HSG)$600

For patients who need financing, the clinic partners with Future Family, which offers payment plans structured over 60-month terms. At a representative rate of 7.99% APR, an IVF cycle can be spread to approximately $269 per month, and an egg freezing cycle to roughly $106 per month — making treatment accessible to patients who cannot absorb large lump-sum expenses.

Patients who have employer-sponsored health plans should review their Summary of Benefits carefully before assuming no coverage exists. Some large Georgia employers — particularly in the technology and healthcare industries — voluntarily cover fertility diagnostics or even full IVF cycles as a talent benefit. Our fertility insurance by state guide offers a framework for evaluating what your plan actually covers before your first appointment.


Frequently Asked Questions

What does "Muna" mean, and why did Dr. Fru choose that name?

"Muna" is the word for "My Child" in Akum, a language spoken in the Northwest Region of Cameroon, where Dr. Fru grew up. She chose it because it reflects both the profound desire that patients bring to fertility care and her vision for what that care should feel like — intimate, personal, and centered on the patient's individual story rather than a generalized treatment algorithm.

Is Muna Fertility a good fit for LGBTQ+ patients and single parents?

Yes. Inclusive care for LGBTQ+ individuals and families, and for single parents by choice, is a founding principle of the practice. Dr. Fru and her team specifically distinguish between medical infertility (a physiological condition) and social infertility (the absence of a partner needed for conception), treating both as fully valid reasons to seek fertility care. Patient feedback from LGBTQ+ families consistently highlights that they felt welcomed and respected throughout treatment.

How does the clinic handle egg retrievals and embryo transfers as a newer practice?

As Muna Fertility continues building out its dedicated procedural space, egg retrievals and embryo transfers are performed in a shared surgical suite at an established Atlanta clinic. This is a common operational arrangement for boutique practices in their early years and does not affect the physician's involvement — Dr. Fru performs or directly supervises the procedures. Consultations, monitoring appointments, and most diagnostic work take place at the Piedmont Road clinic location.

Does Muna Fertility report outcome data to SART or the CDC?

As a clinic that opened in 2024, Muna Fertility is in the early stages of SART reporting. Meaningful cohort data typically takes two to three annual reporting cycles to become publicly visible in the CDC ART database. In the interim, the most useful proxy for evaluating clinical quality is Dr. Fru's training background — an NIH fellowship, double board certification, and more than ten years of REI practice — alongside current patient reviews. For context on how to evaluate IVF outcomes generally, our IVF guide covers how to interpret success rate data by age group.

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