http://www.independent.co.uk/news/science/birth-control-for-men-in-one-injection-1679000.html


Birth control for men in one injection

Chinese scientists succeed with testosterone jab trial on 1,000 volunteers

By Jerome Taylor




Tuesday, 5 May 2009


Scientists believe they are one step closer to developing an effective male 
contraceptive jab after successfully carrying out the largest feasibility study 
to date. 


Researchers at the National Research for Family Planning in Beijing injected 
1,000 healthy, fertile male patients with a testosterone-based jab over a 
two-year period and found only 1 per cent went on to father a child. The men 
were all aged between 20 and 45 and had fathered at least one child in the two 
years before the testing began. They were also all involved with healthy female 
partners between the ages of 18 and 38 who had no reproductive problems of 
their own.

The trial was the largest effectiveness study of a testosterone-based male 
contraceptive ever undertaken. At the end of the two-year period only one in 
100 men had fathered a child. No contraception is 100 per cent effective - 1 to 
2 per cent of women still become pregnant while they are on the Pill - but the 
jab's success rate puts it on a par with the effectiveness of the female Pill 
or injections. 

Dr Yi-Qun Gu, one of the researchers involved in the testing, said: "For 
couples who cannot or prefer not to use only female-oriented contraception, 
options have been limited to vasectomy, condom and withdrawal. Our study shows 
a male hormonal contraceptive regimen may be a potential, novel and workable 
alternative."

When the contraceptive Pill was introduced in the 1960s it revolutionised sex 
lives but also placed the onus of reproductive responsibility on women. 
Scientists have been looking to try to find a suitable alternative for men but 
have struggled to control male hormones with the same level of efficiency. 
Previous attempts to develop an effective and convenient male contraceptive 
have encountered problems over reliability and side-effects, such as mood 
swings and a lowered sex drive. 

Like the female Pill, most testing for a male pill or injection has centred on 
using hormones to stop the production of key elements of the reproductive 
process. For the testing in China, a country which has invested heavily in 
reproductive technology because of its overpopulation problems, the men were 
given 500mg of testosterone undecanoate (TU) in tea seed oil. The injections 
resulted in a reduction of two regulatory brain chemicals, follicle-stimulating 
hormone (FSH) and luteinising hormone (LH) which in turn disrupted sperm 
production.

The scientists claim that there were none of the usual side-effects and say the 
process is reversible. Six months after coming off the injections, the men's 
sperm count had returned to healthy levels. Dr Gu said further testing would be 
needed to check how safe testosterone injections are. 

Family planning campaigners have welcomed the news and said they hoped an 
injection would result in men taking a greater level of responsibility over 
contraception.


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