Symptomatic benefits of testosterone treatment in patient subgroups

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Summary

Background


Testosterone replacement therapy is known to improve sexual function in men younger than 40 years with pathological hypogonadism. However, the extent to which testosterone alleviates sexual dysfunction in older men and men with obesity is unclear, despite the fact that testosterone is being increasingly prescribed to these patient populations. We aimed to evaluate whether subgroups of men with low testosterone derive any symptomatic benefit from testosterone treatment.


Methods

We did a systematic review and meta-analysis to evaluate characteristics associated with the symptomatic benefit of testosterone treatment versus placebo in men aged 18 years and older with a baseline serum total testosterone concentration of less than 12 nmol/L. We searched major electronic databases (MEDLINE, Embase, Science CitationIndex, and the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials) and clinical trial registries for reports published in English between Jan 1, 1992, and Aug 27, 2018. Anonymized individual participant data were requested from the investigators of all identified trials. Primary (cardiovascular) outcomes from this analysis have been published previously. In this report, we present the secondary outcomes of sexual function, quality of life, and psychological outcomes at 12 months. We did a one-stage individual participant data meta-analysis with a random-effects linear regression model, and a two-stage meta-analysis integrating individual participant data with aggregated data from studies that did not provide individual participant data. This study is registered with PROSPERO, CRD42018111005.


Findings

9871 citations were identified through database searches. After the exclusion of duplicates and publications not meeting inclusion criteria, 225 full texts were assessed for inclusion, of which 109 publications reporting 35 primary studies (with a total of 5601 participants) were included. Of these, 17 trials provided individual participant data(3431 participants; median age 67 years [IQR 60–72]; 3281 [97%] of 3380 aged ≥40 years). Compared with placebo, testosterone treatment increased 15-item International Index of Erectile Function (IIEF-15) total score (mean difference 5·52 [95% CI 3·95–7·10]; τ²=1·17; n=1412) and IIEF-15 erectile function subscore (2·14 [1·40–2·89];τ²=0·64; n=1436), reaching the minimal clinically important difference for mild erectile dysfunction. These effects were not found to be dependent on participant age, obesity, presence of diabetes, or baseline serum total testosterone. However, absolute IIEF-15 scores reached during testosterone treatment were subject to thresholds in patient age and baseline serum total testosterone. Testosterone significantly improved Aging Males’ Symptoms score, and some 12-item or 36-item Short Form Survey quality of life subscores compared with placebo, but it did not significantly improve psychological symptoms (measured by Beck Depression Inventory).


Interpretation

In men aged 40 years or older with baseline serum testosterone of less than 12 nmol/L, short-to-medium-term testosterone treatment could provide clinically meaningful treatment for mild erectile dysfunction, irrespective of patient age, obesity, or degree of low testosterone. However, due to more severe baseline symptoms, the absolute level of sexual function reached during testosterone treatment might be lower in older men and men with obesity.








Although long-term efficacy and safety data regarding testosterone replacement therapy are not yet available, this study provides useful new information for clinicians to counsel men without classic hypogonadism about the short-to-medium-term benefits of testosterone treatment. Testosterone should always be initiated within a holistic clinical care model, including assessment for potentially modifiable risk factors, such as obesity and smoking.
 

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Table 1: Baseline characteristics of participants enrolled in the 17 studies with available individual participant data (n=3431)
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Table 2: One-stage analysis of sexual function, quality-of-life, and psychological outcomes during testosterone replacement therapy versus placebo
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Figure 2: Post-hoc subgroup analysis for testosterone treatment versus placebo for IIEF-15 score (A), AgingMales’ Symptoms scale (B), and Beck Depression Inventory (C) Effects by route of administration are shown in the appendix (pp 51, 55). IIEF-15=15-item International Index of Erectile Function.
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Figure 3: Thresholds for IIEF-15 score during testosterone replacement therapy Scatter plots of IIEF-15 scoreduring testosterone treatment for participant age (A), baseline total serum testosterone (B), and BMI (C). Vertical dashed lines indicate statistically significant thresholds in the characteristic(age, serum testosterone, or BMI). Grey shading indicates mean IIEF-15 scores of less than the mean. IIEF-15=15-item International Index of Erectile Function.
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