injections, nine of ten animals regained fertility, but the time taken for this depended upon the rate of decline of antibody titres. Re-boosting these monkeys with 100 \ g=m\ g oFSH after confirming that recovery had occurred revealed prompt increases in antibody titres followed once again by onset of oligo-azoospermia and infertility, underscoring the specificity of immunization effect. The immunized monkeys, apart from being acutely oligospermic, ejaculated spermatozoa that were markedly deficient in key acrosomal enzymes, such as acrosin and hyaluronidase, and motility as well as in their ability to penetrate a gel in vitro, suggesting that the infertility observed was due to gross reductions in the numbers of spermatozoa that could effectively interact with the oocyte and cause successful fertilization.
A study of 140 days duration was performed to examine if human male volunteers (n = 5) respond to ovine follicle stimulating hormone (oFSH) immunization (administered adsorbed on Alugel on days 1, 20, 40 and 70) by producing antibodies capable of both binding and neutralizing bioactivity of human FSH. The kinetics of antibody production for both the immunogen (oFSH) and the cross-reactive antigen (hFSH) were essentially similar. The volunteers responded only to the first two immunizations. The boosters given on days 40 and 70 were ineffective, probably because of the presence of substantial amounts of circulating antibody to oFSH. Of the antibodies generated to oFSH, 25-45% bound hFSH with a mean binding affinity of 0.65 x 10(9) +/- 0.53 M(-1). The binding capacities at the time of high (30-80 days of immunization) and low (>110 days) titres were 346 +/- 185 and 10.5 +/- 5.8 ng hFSH/ml respectively. During the period of high titre, free serum FSH (value in normal males 1-5 ng/ml) was not monitorable. A 50 microl aliquot of the antiserum obtained from different volunteers between days 30 and 80 and on day 140 blocked binding of (125)I-labelled hFSH to its receptor by 82 +/- 9.7 and 53 +/- 12.2% respectively. The antibody produced was specific for FSH, and no significant change in the values of related glycoprotein hormones (luteinizing hormone/testosterone and thyroid stimulating hormone/thyroxine) were recorded. Seminal plasma transferrin, a marker of Sertoli cell as well as of seminiferous tubular function, showed marked reduction (30-90%) following immunization with oFSH. Considering that endogenous FSH remained neutralized for approximately one sperm cycle only (65 days), the reduction in sperm counts (30-74%) exhibited by some volunteers is encouraging. Immunization with oFSH did not result in any significant changes in haematology, serum biochemistry or hormonal profiles. There was no production of antibodies capable of interacting with non-specific tissues. It is concluded that it should be possible to obtain a sustained long-term blockade of endogenous FSH action in men by using oFSH as an immunogen. This is a prerequisite for obtaining significant reduction in the quality and quantity of spermatozoa produced, thus leading to infertility.
This paper reviews the recent advances that have occurred in the area of development of a male contraceptive vaccine. The vaccine candidates considered for review are hormone/hormone receptor-based proteins including luteinizing hormone-releasing hormone (LHRH)/LH, follicle stimulating hormone (FSH), as well as LH and FSH receptor proteins. The review also highlights the advances in our basic understanding of gonadotrophin action which have led to development of these vaccines. Focus is mainly on studies in the non-human primate which may be directly relevant to projected studies in the human. The data indicate that the vaccines are well tolerated by the primate (including the human based on limited data) and do not give rise to any known toxic symptoms or immediate health hazards. The response to the immunogen has been uniform and it may be possible to increase antibody titres as well as prolong the immune response by adding acceptable immune stimulators to the adjuvant cocktail and developing better immunization schedules or immunogen delivery systems. Contraceptive vaccines for the male are a feasible proposition and attention should now be focussed on evaluating carefully the bioefficacy of antibodies raised to recombinant ovine FSHbeta or FSH receptor protein fragments in both human and non-human primates. The advantage of the FSH/FSH receptor over the LHRH/LH-based vaccine lies in the fact that the former does not require an exogenous testosterone supplement to maintain accessory gland function, libido etc. The LHRH/LH-based vaccine results in azoospermia, while the FSH vaccine causes the production of low numbers of poor quality spermatozoa which are incapable of impregnating cycling females.
IntroductionThe enhanced recovery after surgery (ERAS) programmes following hysterectomies have been studied since 2010, and their positive effects on clinical or economic criteria are now well established. However, the benefits on health outcomes, especially rapid recovery after surgery from patients’ perspective is lacking in literature, leading to develop scores supporting person-centred and value-based care such as patient-reported outcome measures. The aim of this study is to assess the impact of an ERAS programme on patients’ well-being after undergoing hysterectomy.Methods and analysisThis is an observational, prospective single-centre before-after clinical trial. 148 patients are recruited and allocated into two groups, before and after ERAS programme implementation, respectively. The ERAS programme consists in optimising factors dealing with early rehabilitation, such as preoperative patient education, multimodal pain management, early postoperative fluid taken and mobilisation. A self-questionnaire quality of recovery-15 (QoR-15) on the preoperative day 1 (D−1), postoperative day 0 evening (D0) and the postoperative day 1 (D+1) is completed by patients. Patients scheduled to undergo hysterectomy, aged 18 years and above, whose physical status are classified as American Society of Anesthesiologists score 1−3 and who are able to return home after being discharged from hospital and contact their physician or the medical department if necessary are recruited for this study. The total duration of inclusion is 36 months. The primary outcome is the difference in QoR-15 scores measured on D+1 which will be compared between the ‘before’ and the ‘after’ group, using multiple linear regression model.Ethics and disseminationApproval was obtained from the Ethical Committee (Paris, France). Subjects are actually being recruited after giving their oral agreement or non-objection to participate in this clinical trial and following the oral and written information given by the anaesthesiologist practitioner.Trial registration number: ClinicalTrials.gov: NCT04268576 (Pre-result).
Cyclic monkeys were deprived of FSH for specific periods on different days of the follicular phase by injecting them with minimal doses of an FSH antiserum characterized for specificity and bioneutralizing ability. The effect of the antiserum on follicular maturation was assessed by determining (a) serum oestrogen concentrations through the midcycle period, (b) serum progesterone concentrations as an index of ovulation and luteal function, (c) laparoscopic examination of the surface of the ovary when necessary, and (d) overall cycle length. While antiserum injection on Day 5 of the cycle caused delay in the oestrogen surge from Days 9 to 11, injection on Day 6 led to the occurrence of two oestrogen surges, on Days 9 and 14. Laparoscopic examination showed that the earlier follicle had disappeared and a new follicle had appeared by Day 14. Antiserum injection on Day 7 of the cycle arrested further growth of the maturing follicle, but a new follicle appeared 9 days later, as indicated by a surge of oestrogen on Day 16. Injection of antiserum beyond Day 7 had no effect on follicular development, ovulation and luteal function. These observations suggest that the mature follicle becomes relatively independent of FSH support about 48 h before ovulation and this event could be a marker for follicular dominance.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
customersupport@researchsolutions.com
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
Copyright © 2025 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.