The Star Early Edition

New jab to help men plan their parenthood

- DAILY MAIL

AMALE contracept­ive jab has been found to prevent pregnancy for up to two years. The one-time injection, which has been described as a “reversible vasectomy”, is more effective than the female Pill, and comes as a new breakthrou­gh in the search for a male equivalent.

A previous jab, using hormones to disrupt sperm production in the brain, was found to cause side effects including depression and muscle pain, leading 20 men to drop out of a year-long trial.

But the new non-hormonal injection, which had a 100% success rate in a study on monkeys, did not appear to cause any side effects. It could provide another option for the thousands of men who have vasectomie­s each year.

The Vasalgel jab works by injecting a gel into the vas deference – the tube which transports sperm from the testicles to the urethra – to block it.

As well as being less painful than “the snip”, a previous study on rabbits found it to be reversible. Surgery to reverse a vasectomy costs thousands of pounds, and has a success rate as low as 30%.

It could be trialled on humans as early as next year after working in male rhesus monkeys, which failed to impregnate female monkeys over a period of up to two years.

Professor Adam Balen, chairperso­n of the British Fertility Society, said: “This is an interestin­g technique that achieves a reversible vasectomy by blocking the passage of sperm with a substance that later can be flushed out. If free of side effects, then this novel approach has the potential for great promise as a male contracept­ive.”

The study, by the California National Primate Research Centre, monitored a group of 16 monkeys given Vasalgel for at least one breeding season. Typically, 80% of the females housed with them during such a period would become pregnant.

But they found that over an average of almost 1.2 years – and up to two years for some monkeys – there were no pregnancie­s, reported the journal Basic and Clinical Andrology.

This is more successful than the Pill, which is around 99% effective.

Achieves a reversible vasectomy

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa