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Testosterone
supplementation for Older Men appears to
have limited benefit
Newswise — Older men
with low testosterone levels who received
testosterone supplementation increased lean
body mass and decreased body fat, but were
no stronger and had no improvement in
mobility or cognition compared with men who
did not use the supplement, according to a
study in the January 2 issue of JAMA.
“Male aging is
associated with a gradual but progressive
decline in serum levels of testosterone,
occurring to a greater extent in some men
than in others. Decline in testosterone is
associated with many symptoms and signs of
aging such as a decrease in muscle mass and
muscle strength, cognitive decline, a
decrease in bone mass, and an increase in
(abdominal) fat mass,” the authors write.
Clinical trials
examining whether testosterone
supplementation provides benefits or adverse
effects have yielded mixed findings.
Marielle H.
Emmelot-Vonk, M.D., of University Medical
Center Utrecht, the Netherlands, and
colleagues conducted a randomized,
placebo-controlled study to assess the
effects of testosterone supplementation on
functional mobility, cognition, bone mineral
density, body composition, lipids, quality
of life, and safety parameters in older men
with testosterone levels less than 13.7 nmol/L
(less than the average level in this age
group) during a period of six months.
The trial, conducted
from January 2004 to April 2005, included
207 men between the ages of 60 and 80 years.
Participants were randomly assigned to
receive 80 mg of testosterone undecenoate or
a matching placebo twice daily for six
months.
The researchers found
that during the study, lean body mass
increased and fat mass decreased in the
testosterone group compared with the placebo
group but these factors were not accompanied
by an increase of functional mobility or
muscle strength.
Cognitive function and
bone mineral density did not change. Insulin
sensitivity improved but high-density
lipoprotein cholesterol (the “good”
cholesterol) decreased.
By the end of the
study, 47.8 percent in the testosterone
group vs. 35.5 percent in the placebo group
had the metabolic syndrome (a strong risk
factor for cardiovascular disease and type 2
diabetes, a group of several metabolic
components in one individual including
obesity and dyslipidemia). This difference
was not statistically significant.
Quality-of-life
measures did not differ aside from
hormone-related quality of life in the
testosterone group. Adverse events were not
significantly different in the two groups.
Testosterone
supplementation was associated with an
increase in the concentrations of blood
creatinine, a measure of kidney function,
and hemoglobin and hematocrit, two red blood
cell measures.
No negative effects on
prostate safety were detected (some reports
have suggested that testosterone therapy
could increase the risk of development or
progression of prostate disease or cancer).
“This study is, as far
as we know, the largest study of
testosterone supplementation with the most
end points and a randomized, double-blind
design. Adherence was high and the dropout
rate was low,” the authors write.
“The findings in
this study do not support a net benefit on
several indicators of health and functional
and cognitive performance with 6 months of
modest testosterone supplementation in
healthy men with circulating testosterone
levels in the lower range.”