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How a male contraceptive pill could work

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    When I tell people
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    that I'm trying to develop
    a contraceptive pill for men,
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    the response usually varies
    along gender lines.
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    Women say something like,
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    "Fantastic. It's about time. When?"
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    (Laughter)
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    Men have one of two responses.
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    They either love the idea,
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    or they look at me a little warily
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    and wonder what exactly
    I have in store for their testicles.
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    (Laughter)
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    So why does the world need a male pill?
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    Well, what if I told you
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    that of the six million pregnancies
    annually in the United States,
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    three million of them are unintended?
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    That's half.
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    That's a really surprising number,
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    and those three million
    unintended pregnancies
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    account for the vast majority
    of the more than one million abortions
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    annually performed in the United States.
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    Happily, the rate of unintended pregnancy
    has fallen in the last few years
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    by about 10 percent.
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    This is because more women
    are using effective, long-acting,
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    reversible forms of contraception.
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    But we still have a long way to go.
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    One approach that's finally
    becoming a real possibility
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    is better contraceptive options for men.
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    Think about it.
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    We have over a dozen methods
    of contraception for women:
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    pills, patches, IUDs, shots,
    sponges, rings, etc.
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    For men, we've had the same two options
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    for more than a hundred years:
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    condoms and vasectomy.
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    Despite having only two options,
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    both of which have significant drawbacks,
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    men currently account for 30 percent
    of all contraceptive use,
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    with 10 percent of couples
    relying on vasectomy
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    and 20 percent of couples using condoms.
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    Why are 20 percent of couples
    relying on condoms for contraception
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    when condoms have a one-year
    failure rate of over 15 percent?
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    It's because many women
    can't either safely take
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    currently available female contraceptives
    for reasons such as blood clots,
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    or they can't tolerate the side effects.
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    So if we think a male contraceptive
    would be useful, the next question is,
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    how do we go about developing one?
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    Well, there's two general approaches.
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    The first approach is to try and interfere
    with the way the sperm swim towards
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    or bind to the egg.
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    This approach turns out
    to be really difficult,
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    because it's hard to get enough medication
    in the small volume of the ejaculate
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    and have it still work inside
    the female reproductive tract.
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    This is why there's been a lot more work
    done on the second approach,
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    which is turning off
    sperm production entirely.
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    This is also challenging.
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    Why? Turns out that men
    make a lot of sperm.
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    Men make a thousand sperm every second,
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    and to have an effective contraceptive,
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    you need to get that level
    of sperm production
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    down to one percent of its normal value.
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    The good news is, this is possible,
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    almost.
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    The most studied approach has been to use
    hormones to suppress sperm production.
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    Testosterone and progesterone,
    when administered together,
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    will suppress the signals from the brain
    to the testes to make sperm,
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    and in about 90 percent of men,
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    sperm production after
    three to four months will stop.
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    Unfortunately, 10 percent of men
    don't respond to these hormonal regimens
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    for reasons that aren't understood.
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    For the last several years,
    my colleagues and I
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    have been taking a different approach
    to male contraceptive development,
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    one that doesn't involve
    the administration of hormones.
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    Specifically, we are looking to block
    the function of Vitamin A in the testes.
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    Why? Well, for over 90 years
    it's been known
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    that you need Vitamin A to make sperm.
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    Animals who are deprived
    of Vitamin A in their diet
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    stop making sperm
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    and restart making sperm again
    when the Vitamin A is reintroduced.
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    The Vitamin A that we ingest
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    is converted by a family of enzymes
    to something called retinoic acid.
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    One of these enzymes
    is found only in the testes.
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    It's this enzyme that we
    are attempting to block.
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    The blockade of this enzyme
    should provide the testes of retinoic acid
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    and stop sperm production
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    without affecting Vitamin A's functions
    elsewhere in the body.
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    We're testing this approach in animals,
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    and hope to move to human testing soon.
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    Obviously, the impact
    of such a male contraceptive
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    would go well beyond reproductive biology.
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    It's interesting to speculate
    about the effect that it would have
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    on relationships between men and women.
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    One intriguing possibility
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    is that a man could monitor
    his contraceptive status over time.
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    In the last several years,
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    two groups have introduced
    home sperm-testing devices
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    that are iPhone-based
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    and that are easy to use.
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    A man could test his sperm count
    and share the result with his partner.
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    If the man's sperm count were zero,
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    the man and his partner
    would feel very comfortable
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    relying on his contraceptive.
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    A tool like this, coupled
    with a male contraceptive,
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    could greatly increase the role for men
    in preventing unintended pregnancy.
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    The researchers who are working
    on male contraception
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    are trying to create
    a better future for couples,
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    a future where contraception is no longer
    considered just "a woman's issue,"
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    rather an issue for couples
    to decide together.
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    So why does the world need a male pill?
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    Well I believe that a male pill
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    will help reduce the stubbornly high
    rates of unintended pregnancy and abortion
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    and allow men to equally participate
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    in contraception.
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    Thank you.
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    (Applause)
Title:
How a male contraceptive pill could work
Speaker:
John Amory
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
06:23

English subtitles

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