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Higher testosterone may raise risk of heart
disease in elderly men
July 2010--A large U.S. multicenter study shows that older men with higher
testosterone levels are more likely to have
a heart attack or other cardiovascular
disease in the future. The results were
presented at The Endocrine Society's 92nd
Annual Meeting in San Diego.
"The study finding contradicts smaller studies that have shown that
testosterone levels are not associated with
higher rates of cardiovascular disease,"
said presenting author Kristen Sueoka, MD, a
resident physician at the University of
California, San Francisco.
"Many in the general public are using testosterone supplements for
various medical problems, including low sex
drive and mood disorders, which are not
life-threatening. These men may unknowingly
be placing themselves at higher risk for
cardiovascular disease," she said.
Study participants were age 65 or older and included 697
community-dwelling men who were
participating in the National Institutes of
Health-funded study, Osteoporotic Fractures
in Men (MrOS). None of these men were
receiving testosterone therapy, according to
the study abstract.
All subjects had blood tests to determine their testosterone
levels. The investigators then divided the
men into quartiles, or four groups, of
testosterone range to observe trends in
rates of coronary heart disease events.
This
type of heart disease results from
plaque-clogged or narrowed coronary
arteries, also called atherosclerosis. A
coronary heart disease event included a
heart attack; unstable angina, which is
chest pain usually due to atherosclerosis
and which doctors consider a prelude to a
heart attack; or an angioplasty or bypass
surgery to clear blocked arteries.
During an average follow-up of nearly 4 years, 100 men, or about 14
percent, had a coronary disease event, in
particular, heart attacks, Sueoka said.
After the researchers adjusted for other
potential contributing risk factors for
heart disease, such as elevated cholesterol,
they found that higher total testosterone
level relates to an increased risk of
coronary disease.
Men whose total
testosterone was in the highest quartile
(greater than or equal to 495 nanograms per
deciliter, or ng/dL) had more than twofold
the risk of coronary disease compared with
men in the lowest quartile (below 308 ng/dL).
Other important measures of testosterone in the body and of a
protein that tightly binds with testosterone
(sex hormone-binding globulin) also showed a
close relationship between testosterone and
coronary heart disease, Sueoka said.
The investigators did not divide the men by normal or abnormal
testosterone levels because the definition
of abnormal levels depends on many factors,
including increasing age. In fact, says
Sueoka, "Men with the highest testosterone
could potentially be at risk for heart
disease regardless of the definition of
"normal" levels."
"One day testosterone measurements may be used to help predict
which men are more likely to develop
cardiovascular disease," she said. "But we
need more studies to confirm that high
testosterone is a risk factor for heart
disease."
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