Radiance Fertility — An Honest Editorial Review
Among fertility clinics in Pennsylvania, Radiance Fertility occupies a specific and fairly rare niche: a solo-physician, privately-owned reproductive endocrinology practice in a part of the state where nearly all IVF care has historically flowed through a single large academic program. The clinic sits at 910 Sheraton Drive in Mars, PA 16046 — in Butler County, along the US-19/I-79 corridor that connects Cranberry Township to the northern Pittsburgh suburbs of Wexford, Warrendale, and Zelienople. For patients in Butler, Beaver, Lawrence, and the northern half of Allegheny County, Radiance offers an alternative to the drive into downtown Pittsburgh.
Radiance Fertility is founded and led by Dr. Sunita Katari, a board-certified reproductive endocrinology and infertility (REI) specialist who spent more than a decade on faculty at UPMC Magee-Womens Hospital's Center for Fertility and Reproductive Endocrinology before opening this private practice. The clinic describes itself as Western Pennsylvania's only private (non-health-system-owned) fertility practice — a claim that, based on publicly available Pennsylvania clinic listings, appears accurate.
Training and Credentials
Dr. Katari earned her medical degree from Rangaraya Medical College in India, where she received awards in physiology and preventive medicine. She completed three years of OB/GYN specialty training in the United Kingdom, earning membership in the Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists (MRCOG). She then completed her OB/GYN residency at Temple University's Lewis Katz School of Medicine in Philadelphia, where she received the Berlex Best Teaching Resident Award, followed by her REI fellowship at UPMC Magee-Womens Hospital in Pittsburgh.
She is a board-certified reproductive endocrinology and infertility specialist. Her academic background includes post-doctoral and REI-fellowship research, and she has led NIH-funded projects studying epigenetic changes in children conceived with assisted reproductive technology and the genetics of primary ovarian insufficiency. The clinic states she has overseen more than 1,000 IVF cycles over her career.
Services and Specialties
Services offered at Radiance Fertility include:
- In Vitro Fertilization (IVF), including frozen embryo transfer
- Intrauterine Insemination (IUI) and ovulation induction
- Egg freezing and fertility preservation
- Donor egg IVF and third-party reproduction (gestational carrier coordination)
- Preimplantation genetic testing (PGT)
- Preconception counseling and diagnostic workup
- Semen analysis and male-factor evaluation
- LGBTQ+ family building
- Fertility surgery
The practice advertises in-house labs, ultrasound, and procedure capability, and a LifeAire air-purification system in the embryology lab — a detail worth noting because IVF laboratory air quality is a well-established determinant of embryo development.
Success Rates
As a newer private practice (the Mars location appears to have opened in 2024), Radiance Fertility may not yet have a full multi-year cycle history published in the SART Clinic Summary Report or the CDC ART Success Rates database. SART and CDC reporting carries a roughly two-year lag, so patients evaluating a recently-opened clinic should ask directly about cycle volumes, fertilization rates, blastulation rates, and — once available — age-stratified live birth outcomes. Our how to read IVF success rates guide covers what to ask and what to discount when comparing clinic figures.
For Dr. Katari's cycle-level experience specifically, her UPMC Magee tenure and her self-reported 1,000+ IVF cycles predate this practice. Patients should ask during consultation what her current Radiance cycle volume is and whether the practice is enrolled as a SART-reporting center.
Patient Experience
Radiance Fertility currently holds a 5.0 / 17 rating on Google — a small sample reflecting the practice's recent opening, but uniformly positive. Public reviews emphasize direct physician access (patients speak and email with Dr. Katari rather than a rotating provider pool), unhurried consultation time, and responsiveness during monitoring cycles. This is the typical profile of a solo-REI boutique practice, and it is the main structural trade-off against a large network clinic: fewer providers and less redundancy, but more consistent continuity of care. The office is open Monday through Friday, 7:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m.
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 REI is the right next step.
Insurance and Cost in Pennsylvania
Pennsylvania does not have a state insurance mandate for fertility diagnosis or IVF treatment. That means coverage is entirely a function of your employer's voluntary benefit election. In practical terms for the Pittsburgh region: several major local employers — including UPMC itself, PNC Financial Services, Highmark, and a number of universities — offer some level of fertility benefit, while many smaller employers and self-funded plans offer none. Radiance accepts most major insurance plans and works with Dollar Bank on patient financing. See our fertility insurance mandates by state guide and IVF cost by state breakdown for broader context.
Location and Contact
Address: 910 Sheraton Drive, Professional Building Suite 400, Mars, PA 16046 Phone: (412) 212-3025 Hours: Monday–Friday, 7:30 a.m. – 3:30 p.m. Website: radiancefertility.com
The office is approximately 25 minutes north of downtown Pittsburgh via I-279 and I-79, five minutes from Cranberry Township, and convenient to Wexford, Warrendale, Zelienople, and Butler.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is Radiance Fertility the same as Radiance Fertility PC? Yes. "Radiance Fertility" is the practice's public-facing name; "Radiance Fertility PC" is the legal professional-corporation entity that operates it (the same clinic is listed under the PC name by egg-bank networks and some provider directories). There is one practice, one location, and one physician — Dr. Sunita Katari — at 910 Sheraton Drive in Mars, PA. If you see both names in directory listings, they refer to the same office.
Is Dr. Katari accepting new patients? The practice is actively taking new-patient consults as of this writing. Availability changes month to month; call (412) 212-3025 to confirm and to ask about current wait times for consultation and cycle start.
Does Radiance Fertility report to SART? As a recently-opened private practice, Radiance's inclusion in SART and CDC multi-year reports may lag by 1–2 years after cycle activity begins. Patients should ask during consultation whether the clinic is enrolled in SART reporting and what cycle-level outcomes data (fertilization, blastulation, per-transfer live birth) the practice can share directly.
Editorial note: Independently written by the Fertlo editorial team; not sponsored. See our editorial policy.
