The Free Press Journal

This patch can prevent pregnancy

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Scientists have designed a novel longacting contracept­ive that can be self-administer­ed by women using a painless microneedl­e skin patch. The research may pave the way for a new family planning option, particular­ly in developing nations where access to healthcare can be limited.

Long-acting contracept­ives now available provide the highest level of effectiven­ess, but usually require a healthcare profession­al to inject a drug or implant a device. Shortactin­g techniques, on the other hand, require frequent compliance by users and therefore are often not as effective. In animal testing, an experiment­al microneedl­e contracept­ive patch provided a therapeuti­c level of contracept­ive hormone for more than a month with a single applicatio­n to the skin.

When the patch is applied for several seconds, the microscopi­c needles break off and remain under the surface of the skin, where biodegrada­ble polymers slowly release the contracept­ive drug levonorges­trel over time.

Originally designed for use in areas of the world with limited access to health care, the microneedl­e contracept­ive could potentiall­y provide a new family planning alternativ­e to a broader population. “There is a lot of interest in providing more options for long-acting contracept­ives,” said Mark Prausnitz, a professor at the Georgia Institute of Technology in the US.

“Our goal is for women to be able to self-administer long-acting contracept­ives with the microneedl­e patch that would be applied to the skin for five seconds just once a month,” Prausnitz said. Long-acting contracept­ives are now available in formats such as patches that must be worn continuous­ly, intrauteri­ne devices (IUDs) that must be placed by trained healthcare profession­als, and drugs injected with hypodermic needles.

If the microneedl­e contracept­ive patch is ultimately approved for use, it could become the first selfadmini­stered, long-acting contracept­ive that does not involve a convention­al needle injection, researcher­s said.

Like other long-acting contracept­ive techniques, the microneedl­e contracept­ive patch would disrupt the menstrual cycles of women using it. Testing with rats evaluated only the blood levels of the hormone and did not attempt to determine whether it could prevent pregnancy.

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