Quintuplets to celebrate Christmas at home after leaving NICU

For one Texas mom, this holiday season is extra special.

Theresa Troia, 36, will celebrate Christmas with all five of her quintuplets at home after giving birth to them in June. The last quintuplet to be discharged from the neonatal intensive care unit came home in November, after spending five months hospitalized.

“Last Christmas, I was carrying them and just praying they would all make it here safely. Now, I get to celebrate with five healthy babies in my arms,” the nurse consultant and new mom told ABC News via email. “Being a first-time mom, and to quintuplets, makes every holiday moment feel bigger. Every little thing means so much more.”

Troia, 36, welcomed KylaJosephJaxonViviana, and Isabella at 28 weeks and 1 day. In November, after about five months in the hospital, Viviana was discharged and joined her four siblings at home in El Paso, Texas.

“It feels incredible. I truly don’t have words … like, my home and my heart are finally complete,” Troia said. “Having all five here together after everything we went through in the [neonatal intensive care unit] is something I still wake up grateful for every day.”

Quintuplet births are relatively rare. The National Center for Health Statistics estimates there were only about 148 quadruplet or higher-order births, including quintuplets, in the United States in 2023. What makes Troia’s story even more interesting is that the 36-year-old is a quadruplet herself. 

Troia said she is planning to make the quintuplets’ first Christmas a “magical” one and start new traditions with them, like hanging stockings, leaving cookies and milk out on Christmas Eve and reading Christmas bedtime stories.