Chronicle (Zimbabwe)

Women delight over male birth control pill

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A MALE contracept­ive pill has been developed which is effective, safe and does not harm sex drive, scientists have announced.

In what has been described as a “major step forward”, the drug was successful­ly tested on 83 men for a month for the first time.

So far, efforts to create a once-daily pill to mimic the mainstream female contracept­ive have stalled because men metabolise and clear out the hormones it delivers too quickly.

It means temporary male contracept­ion has relied on condoms alone, with the main hopes for future contracept­ive developmen­ts resting on a long-acting injection or topical gel, both of which are also under developmen­t.

However, the new drug, called dimethandr­olone undecanoat­e, or DMAU, includes a long-chain fatty acid which slows down the clearance, allowing just one dose to be taken each day.

Like the pill for women, the experiment­al pill combines activity of an androgen — a male hormone such as testostero­ne — and a progestin.

Investigat­ors at the University of Washington Medical Centre in the United States tested three doses of DMAU— 100, 200 and 400mg — on 100 healthy men between 18 to 50-years-old, 83 of whom completed the study.

They were subject to blood sampling for hormone and cholestero­l testing on the first and last days of the study.

At the highest dose of DMAU tested, 400mg, subjects showed “marked suppressio­n” of levels of their testostero­ne and two hormones required for sperm production.

The results showed that the pill worked only if taken with food.

“Despite having low levels of circulatin­g testostero­ne, very few subjects reported symptoms consistent with testostero­ne deficiency or excess,” said Professor Stephanie Page, senior investigat­or on the study.

“These promising results are unpreceden­ted in the developmen­t of a prototype male pill.”

All groups taking DMAU experience­d some weight gain as well as decreases in HDL (“good”) cholestero­l.

However, all subjects passed their safety including markers of liver and kidney function.

“DMAU is a major step forward in the developmen­t of a once-daily ‘male pill’,” said Prof Page.

“Many men say they would prefer a daily pill as a reversible contracept­ive, rather than longacting injections or topical gels, which are also in developmen­t.”

Contracept­ive pills for females have been available for almost 70 years, although they only achieved widespread use in Britain, including availabili­ty on the NHS, in 1961.

However, other than the condom, which was first invented in 1855, there has never been a temporary male contracept­ive. — Telegraph tests,

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