| Literature DB >> 32082579 |
Barkha Khilwani1, Ayesha Badar1, Abdul S Ansari1, Nirmal K Lohiya1.
Abstract
Even after decades of research men still lack reliable and reversible contraceptive methods comparable to female methods of contraception. Traditional methods of male contraception present a high failure rate and also involve high risk both when used for contraception and for protection against sexually transmitted diseases. Various chemical, hormonal, immunological, vas based and herbal methods of contraception have been examined by scientists world over during the past four decades. Among the possible lead approaches, exogenous hormonal contraception, either alone or in combination with progesterone or antiandrogen, is being viewed at low profile because of their insufficiency in inducing uniform suppression of spermatogenesis and steroid related long term complications. As an alternative to vasectomy, among various intravasal devices being examined, RISUG® (Reversible Inhibition of Sperm Under Guidance), a co-polymer of styrene and maleic anhydride offers long term contraception with safety, efficacy and it can be delivered by no-scalpel injection. Thus it is the only male contraceptive procedure currently under Phase- III Clinical Trial. The non-invasive reversal technique, successfully demonstrated in langur monkeys and functional reversal achieved with dimethyl sulphoxide (DMSO) and sodium bicarbonate (NaHCO3) in rats and rabbits with safety at F1 generation (first filial generation) have projected RISUG® as a better alternative to vasectomy. In this narrative review we revisit the long journey of RISUG® beginning with formulation on a bench towards reaching the market as a safe and effective contraceptive method, discussing various milestones and roadblocks of this expedition awaiting the mandatory regulatory clearance from the Government of India. Successful completion of ongoing phase III clinical trials with demonstration of reversal in human volunteers will give an indigenously developed male contraceptive to the world.Entities:
Keywords: Azoospermia; Clinical trials; Male contraception; RISUG®; Reversibility
Year: 2020 PMID: 32082579 PMCID: PMC7017607 DOI: 10.1186/s12610-020-0099-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Basic Clin Androl ISSN: 2051-4190
Methods of male contraception
| Method | Advantages | Disadvantages | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| Abstinence | No side effects. No cost. | Difficult to abstain for long duration. | [ |
| Withdrawal | No Cost. | High risk of pregnancy if not withdrawn at time. Pregnancy may occur by pre-ejaculate. | [ |
| Male condoms | Easy availability. Helps in prevention of STIs. | Decrease spontaneity. May break during use. High failure rate. | [ |
| Hormonal approaches | Non-surgical procedure. | Lack of uniform efficacy, Complex formulations, Impractical systemic delivery system, Poor availability, High cost | [ |
| Immuno-contraceptives | Target specific effect. Long-term efficacy. No surgical interventions. | Still under research phase. | [ |
| Non-injectable Plugs | No-scalpel method. Size available according to vas, thus avoids vas rupture. | Lower efficacy. Delayed azoospermia Reversal – less assured | [ |
| Vasectomy | Safe and effective. Risk involved in surgical intervention. | Microsurgical skills required. Antisperm antibody development. Reversal is expensive and partially successful. | [ |
| Non-Scalpel Vasectomy | No surgical procedure. Easy technique. High efficiency. | Reversal is expensive and partially successful. | [ |
| RISUG® | Easy approach. Single intervention. Early contraception Minimal systemic interference. No undue side effects. Better scope for reversal. | No protection against Sexually Transmitted Diseases (STDs). | [ |
Fig. 1Non-scalpel vasectomy approach. The No Scalpel Ring Clamp isolates and secures the vas deferens without penetrating the skin. The No Scalpel Dissecting Forceps pierces the scrotal sac to expose the vas deferens. The vas deferens is lifted out of the scrotum with the No Scalpel Dissecting Forceps and occluded
Fig. 2RISUG: mode of action. (A) Vas is exposed from inguinal region and RISUG is injected in both vas deferens towards distal region by a micro-syringe. (B) RISUG coats the wall of the vas deferens blocking sperm movement. (C) Complete reversal obtained after DMSO/NAHCO3 is injected bilaterally, flushing component of RISUG [37]
Clinical journey of RISUG®
| No. of Subjects | Dose regimen | Sperm count (million/ml) | Remarks | References | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Phase I | 38 | 5 mg to 140 mg | For 60–140 mg dose azoospermia was reported during 20–389 days post injection | Phase I clinical trial showed that the injection of DMSO and DMSO-SMA mixture into the lumen of the vas deferens is a safe procedure with no long-term adverse effects. | [ |
| Phase II | 12 | 60 mg | All subjects were azoospermic within 5–243 days | The results of Phase II clinical trials reconfirm the safety and show that for a period of at least one year, the treatment leads to azoospermia in the male and gives pregnancy protection. | [ |
| Phase III | 315 | 60 mg | After 2.5 months 92.6% subjects and after 6 months 96.7% subjects showed azoospermia post RISUG® injection. | Contraceptive efficacy was found to be 99.02% with 0.3% method failure and 0.98% overall failure in the drug efficacy. | [ |