New male contraceptive targets sperm, not hormonesMay 08, 2006Men and women have long been promised a male version of the female contraceptive pill. But the first new male contraceptive to market may not be hormonal at all. Researchers received Food and Drug Administration approval today for a 90-man study of the Intra Vas Device (IVD), a nonhormonal contraceptive that stops sperm in their tracks. The study, to take place in Seattle, Washington and St. Paul, Minnesota, will bring men one step closer to having their first new contraceptive in more than a century. "Preliminary studies in animals and men show that this doesn't have the side effects of hormonal methods," said Jim Stice, president of Shepherd Medical Company, a consortium of researchers and entrepreneurs developing the device. "The concept is pretty simple: A set of tiny plugs block sperm as they travel through a tube called the vas deferens. Men don't need to worry that they'll have acne or gain weight or have their sex drive go up or down-all things that can happen when you manipulate hormones." This will be the second contraceptive study of the IVD in men. In the pilot study, the method was very effective: All 30 men either had no sperm in their semen or had levels too low to cause a pregnancy. Early monkey studies showed reversibility after seven months of use, but reversibility studies in men have thus far only tested same-day insertion and removal. Elaine Lissner, director of the nonprofit Male Contraception Information Project, is cautiously optimistic. "The Holy Grail of contraception is a long-term, reversible method without any hormonal side effects," she said. "Right now the IVD developers can't guarantee that it's reversible in men like it has been in animals, so they're billing it as a kinder, gentler vasectomy. But if it turns out to be reversible, they're going to have a line out the door." Demand from Men The concept of blocking sperm in the vas deferens is not new: each year about 500,000 American men get vasectomies, a simple 15-minute procedure in which the vas deferens is cut and its ends closed off. About one in six American men over 35 already has a vasectomy. However, vasectomy is generally considered permanent, leaving younger men with condoms as their only option. Men in long-term relationships, such as Jacob Kostecka, 29, are likely to be the first ones interested in the IVD. "My wife doesn't want to take hormonal methods, and I don't blame her. I wouldn't want to take that stuff and have it mess with my body either! But most other methods are clumsy and ruin the moments of intimacy we have together. Something like this could be really appealing." The news about the IVD comes on the heels of the announcement that RISUG, a vas deferens-based male contraceptive developed in India, will resume trials in men. RISUG has been shown reversible in animals. Researchers in China are also having success with a new vas deferens device, though theirs is not being billed as reversible. Kirsten Thompson, director of the Male Contraceptive Coalition, stresses that men can help speed development of these methods. "Men clearly want to know about these options-our website gets thousands of visitors each week. But there are still questions to be answered about the IVD's reversibility," she said. She added that "Men who don't want any more children and live near a study site can help answer those questions by volunteering. Otherwise, the best thing they can do is spread the word." Male Contraception Information Project |
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| Related Male Contraceptive Current Events and Male Contraceptive News Articles Injectable testosterone may provide effective male contraception Researchers in China may have found a method for male contraception that is effective, reversible and without serious short-term adverse effects according to a new study accepted for publication in The Endocrine Society's Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism (JCEM). Small RNAs can play critical roles in male infertility/contraception University of Nevada School of Medicine scientists in the Department of Physiology and Cell Biology have discovered insight into the reproductive workings of the male sex chromosome that may have significant implications for male infertility and contraception. Male contraception: One door opens, another closes We have often heard that a new male contraceptive is "five to ten years" away. But are we getting any closer? The answer may finally be "yes." This week marked the announcement of one hot new lead and one dead end. New male contraceptive clears hurdle Tyler Dunlap, a 27-year-old newlywed in San Francisco, is just one of the many American men eagerly awaiting the results of a new male contraceptive clinical trial in India. US researchers show cottonseed drug is cancer treatment booster - patient trials now planned New research has opened up the prospect that gossypol - a drug refined from cottonseed oil and previously tried and abandoned as a male contraceptive - could boost the effectiveness of treatment for prostate tumours and possibly other common cancers as well. New leads in the development of an oral contraceptive for men Latest research at Oxford University’s Glycobiology Institute has provided new leads towards the development of an oral contraceptive for men. The advantages of the substance at the centre of the research, an alkylated imino sugar (NB-DNJ), are that it does not affect reproductive hormones, its effects are easily reversed and it is undergoing clinical evaluation in other contexts. Chemistry & Industry - Issue 7 Cover Date 1 April 2002 NEWS Biotech firms flounder (page 4) This year has started badly for biotech companies, with drug trials showing poor clinical performance and analysts downgrading predicted market values. UBS Warburg analyst Karl Keegan comments ‘A lot of the problems that have occurred are a reflection of the naivety of investors and management’ Prions in skeletal muscle to be investigated (page 4) Prions, abnormal proteins linked to BSE, grow in the skeletal muscle of laboratory mice, a finding that has sparked calls for testing in other animals such as cattle, deer and elk. Male contraceptive trial yields promising results (page 5) The most successful trial to date of a male contraceptive ha International survey finds-two thirds of men would take 'the Pill' Two-thirds of men questioned in an international survey said they would use a male Pill if it were available, and nearly all the women questioned said they would trust their partners to take it. Thefindings are published today (Wednesday 23 February) in the journal Human Reproduction.* More Male Contraceptive Current Events and Male Contraceptive News Articles |
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