| Literature DB >> 31190486 |
Andreas Walther1,2,3, Julian Seuffert1.
Abstract
Although demographic statistics show that populations around the world are rapidly ageing, this rising life expectancy is accompanied by an increase in the number of people living with age-related chronic conditions, such as frailty, cognitive decline, depression, or sexual dysfunction. In men, a progressive decline in androgens occurs with increasing age, and low androgen levels are associated with age-related chronic conditions. However, androgen administration studies are inconclusive, showing differing results according to the androgen used (testosterone [T], dehydroepiandrosterone [DHEA]), the group of men examined (younger vs. older; eugonadal vs. hypogonadal) and the conditions studied (frailty, cognitive decline, depression, sexual dysfunction). In this review, the current state for the use of T and DHEA therapy in men for the age-related conditions is examined. Due to the progressive age-related decline in androgens leading to a higher rate of older men having low androgen levels, the effects of androgen treatment in elderly males will be of particular interest in this review. Dose-response relationships, the role of potential moderators, and the androgen treatment-related risk for adverse events will be discussed. Studies have suggested that T treatment - more so than DHEA treatment - may be an effective therapy against age-related chronic conditions in men with low T levels; especially older men. Such conditions include frailty, depression, or sexual dysfunction. However, T treatment does not emerge as an effective therapy against cognitive decline. Nevertheless, more high-quality, randomised controlled trials using T treatment for age-related chronic conditions are necessary if further conclusions are to be made.Entities:
Keywords: Aging; Dehydroepiandrosterone; Healthy aging; Men; Morbidity; Testosterone
Year: 2019 PMID: 31190486 PMCID: PMC7076306 DOI: 10.5534/wjmh.190006
Source DB: PubMed Journal: World J Mens Health ISSN: 2287-4208 Impact factor: 5.400
Adverse effects of low testosterone (hypogonadism) and low DHEA levels
| Variable | Affected tissues/Functions | Symptoms |
|---|---|---|
| Testosterone [ | Bones | Osteoporosis |
| Muscles | Atrophy | |
| Fat tissue | Increase | |
| Metabolism | Insulin resistance | |
| Mood | Depressed | |
| Cognition | Lower spatial perception | |
| Libido, erection | Loss | |
| Penis, prostate and testes | Scaling down/ atrophy | |
| DHEA [ | Sexual function | Decline |
| General health | Decline | |
| Mood | Depressed | |
| Cognition | Memory degradation | |
| Cardiovascular system | Coronary arteriosclerosis |
DHEA: dehydroepiandrosterone.
Effects of testosterone treatment in different domains
| Domain | Beneficial/Adverse effects | References |
|---|---|---|
| Body composition | • Increase of bone mineral density and lean mass in hypogonadal men | [ |
| • Decrease of body fat, increase of bone mineral density and bone strength and therefore reduction of frailty in older men | ||
| Cognition | • Small RCT found beneficial effects in several memory dimensions | [ |
| • Replication failed in more representative RCTs | ||
| Mood and depressive disorders | • Improvements in several depression severity measures in depressed and dysthymic patients | [ |
| • In older men evidence is inconsistent | ||
| • Inconsistent effects in treatment-resistant depressed men or HIV infected depressed men | ||
| • Identification of a dose-response relationship between testosterone and depressive symptoms | ||
| • Improvements in intercourse satisfaction, sexual desire and orgasm in men of all age categories | ||
| Sexual functioning | • More mixed results and only moderate improvement of sexual function in older men | [ |
RCT: randomized controlled trial, HIV: human immunodeficiency virus.
Effects of dehydroepiandrosterone treatment in different domains
| Domain | Beneficial/Adverse effects | References |
|---|---|---|
| Body composition | • Inconsistent evidence with regard to bone mineral density, bone health and metabolism | [ |
| • Reduction of fat mass in older men | ||
| Cognition | • Improvement of episodic memory in one study | [ |
| • Insufficient evidence to suggest beneficial effects | ||
| Mood and depressive disorders | • Some studies suggest mood enhancing effects | [ |
| • Insufficient evidence to suggest beneficial effects | ||
| Sexual functioning | • Some studies report positive effects, other no effects | [ |
| • Insufficient evidence to suggest beneficial effects |