| Literature DB >> 35021306 |
Abstract
Alzheimer's disease (AD) is a neurodegenerative disease responsible for almost half of all dementia cases in the world and progressively increasing. The etiopathology includes heritability, genetic factors, aging, nutrition, but sex hormones play a relevant role. Animal models demonstrated that testosterone (T) exerted a neuroprotective effect reducing the production of amyloid-beta (Aβ), improving synaptic signaling, and counteracting neuronal death. This study aims to evaluate the impact of T deprivation and T administration in humans on the onset of dementia and AD. A search was conducted on MEDLINE and Scopus for the "androgen deprivation therapy" and "testosterone therapy" with "dementia" and "Alzheimer's." Studies lasting twenty years with low risk of bias, randomized clinical trial, and case-controlled studies were considered. Twelve articles on the effect of androgen deprivation therapy (ADT) and AD and seventeen on T therapy and AD were retrieved. Men with prostate cancer under ADT showed a higher incidence of dementia and AD. The effect of T administration in hypogonadal men with AD and cognitive impairment has evidenced some positive results. The majority of studies showed the T administration improved memory and cognition in AD while others did not find any benefit. Although some biases in the studies are evident, T therapy for AD patients may represent an essential clinical therapy to reduce dementia incidence and AD progression. However, more specific case-controlled trials on the effect of androgens therapy in men and women to reducing the onset of AD are necessary.Entities:
Keywords: Alzheimer disease; Amyloid beta-peptides; Dementia; Estradiol; Neuroprotection; Testosterone
Year: 2022 PMID: 35021306 PMCID: PMC8987133 DOI: 10.5534/wjmh.210175
Source DB: PubMed Journal: World J Mens Health ISSN: 2287-4208 Impact factor: 5.400
Fig. 1Testosterone, the effect of α-reductase, is reduced to DHT, the strongest non-aromatizable androgen. DHT is then in Androstenediol from which metabolites 3α- and 3β-diol have a weak effect on AR while are more active on Erα and Erβ. 3α-diol activates GABA-receptors which regulate anxiety, depression and seizure. Testosterone is also aromatized in 17β-estradiol which, activating Erα and β, stimulates mitochondrial function, neurotransmission, and anti-inflammatory effect with consequent improved cognition. DHT and DHEAS activate the NMDA receptors which regulate memory, learning impairment, and psychosis. DHT: dihydrotestosterone, NMDA: N-methyl-d-aspartate, AR: androgen receptor.
Effect of ADT on cognitive impairment and AD development
| Study | Patients | Age (y)a | Study | Observational time | Clinical outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hong et al, 2020 [ | 24,464 men with PC | ADT 74.1 | Cohort study | 4.98 years | ADT was significant associated with overall risk of cognitive decline. |
| Huang et al, 2020 [ | 23,651 men with PC | 73 | Cohort study | - | ADT was associated with an increased risk of dementia or AD. GnRH agonist and orchiectomy had no significant difference compared with patients who did not receive ADT. |
| Jayadevappa et al, 2019 [ | 154,089 men with PC | 76 | Retrospective studies | 8.3 years | ADT exposure was associated with subsequent diagnosis of AD or dementia. |
| Krasnova et al, 2020 [ | 100,414 men with PC | 73 | Observational | 6 months | ADT was associated with a higher risk of all-cause dementia, AD. |
| Jarzemski et al, 2019 [ | 100 PC prostatectomy | 50–77 | Observational | - | Complex therapies induced a significantly worse result of deferred memory and psychological burden. |
| Robinson et al, 2019 [ | 25,967 men with PC, 121,018 controls | 76.5 | Population-based cohort study | 4 years | No increased risk of Alzheimer’s dementia for men on ADT. |
| Tae et al, 2019 [ | 35,401 National Insurance Service | 70 | Follow-up | 7 years | ADT correlated with an increased risk of cognitive dysfunction. |
| Nguyen et al, 2018 [ | 201,797 men with PC (94,528 patients received ADT) | 66 | Follow-up | 19 years | ADT was associated with higher risks of bone fractures, diabetes, dementia, CHD. |
| Marzouk et al, 2018 [ | 81 PC | 69 | Cohort studies | 1 year | ADT was not associated with self-reported cognitive function decline in non-metastatic PC. |
| Deka et al, 2018 [ | 45,218 | Not reported | Observational cohort study | 6.8 years | No statistically significant increase in the risk of any dementia or AD. |
| Baik et al, 2017 [ | 109,815 men with PC | 67 | Survival analysis | - | Risks of AD and dementia were not associated with the duration of ADT. |
| Alibhai et al, 2017 [ | 77 PC with ADT | 68.9 | Case-control studies | 3 years | ADT was not associated with cognitive decline. |
| 82 PC without ADT | |||||
| 82 controls | |||||
| Kao et al, 2017 [ | 755 PC | 74.2 | Follow-up | 5 years | No difference in the incidence of dementia in patients who receive ADT. |
| Gunlusoy et al, 2017 [ | 78 metastatic PC | 67.1 | Prospective studies | 1 year | ADT affects cognitive functions such as language ability, short-term memory capacity, mental flexibility. |
| 78 controls | 68.6 | ||||
| Nead et al, 2017 [ | 9,455 men with PC | 69.9 | Observational cohort study | 3.4 years | ADT was associated with an increased risk of dementia. |
| Khosrow-Khavar et al, 2017 [ | 30,903 men with PC | 70.7 | Follow up | 4.3 years | ADT was not associated with an increased risk of dementia. |
| Wu et al, 2016 [ | 19 ADT | 67.5 | Retrospective studies | - | ADT patients are more vulnerable to experiencing specific cognitive and neurobehavioral symptoms. |
| 20 controls | 70.0 | ||||
| Chung et al, 2016 [ | 1,335 PC | 72.2 | Retrospective studies | 5 years | ADT in PC was not associated with a higher risk of Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s disease. |
| 4,005 controls | |||||
| Nead et al, 2016 [ | 16,888 men with PC | 70.0 | Retrospective studies | 2.7 years | ADT increased the risk of AD in a general population cohort. |
| Gonzalez et al, 2015 [ | 58 ADT | 67.3 | Comparative study | 5 years | ADT demonstrate impaired cognitive performance within 6 and 12 months. |
| 84 no ADT | 67.7 | ||||
| 88 controls | 69.1 |
ADT: androgen deprivation therapy, AD: Alzheimer’s disease, PC: prostate cancer, CHD: coronary heart disease.
aValues are presented as mean only.
Effect of testosterone therapy on AD and cognitive impairment
| Study | Patients | Age (y)a | Study | Therapy | Duration | Outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Resnick et al, 2017 [ | 788 men, impaired sexual function | 65 | RCT | T gel with a dose to maintain the physiological plasma level | 4 years | No association with improved memory or other cognitive functions. |
| Wahjoepramono et al, 2016 [ | 44 men | ≥50 | RCT | T gel 50 mg | 24 weeks and 4 weeks washout | Significant improvement in general cognitive functioning. |
| Huang et al, 2016 [ | 308 men with low T | 60 | RCT multicenter study | T gel 7.5 g of 1% | 36 months | T administration did not improve cognitive function. |
| Asih et al, 2015 [ | 44, older men | 61±7.7 | RCT | Transdermal | 24 weeks | Significant increases in plasma androgens levels. No changes in plasma amyloid-beta. Dementia is not investigated. |
| Cherrier et al, | 351 men community | 70.5±8.2 | RCT | T gel | 3 months | Modest improvement in verbal memory and depression symptoms. |
| 37 with MCI and low T | ||||||
| Borst et al, 2014 [ | 60 hypogonadal men | 70.8 | RCT | T-enanthate | 12 months | Small improvements in depressive symptoms and visuospatial cognition. |
| Young et al, 2010 [ | 26 young 62 older | 25–35 | RCT | GnRH agonist, T-gel 75 and 100 mg | 6 weeks | Free T positively correlated to spatial cognition while estradiol negatively correlated with working memory. |
| 60–80 | ||||||
| Emmelot-Vonk et al, 2008 [ | 237 healthy men with a low T leve | 60–80 | RCT | T undecenoate 80 mg | 6 months | Cognitive function and bone mineral density did not change. |
| Vaughan et al, 2007 [ | 65 healthy men | RCT | 200 mg of T every 2 weeks with 5 mg of finasteride daily (T+F), or placebo | 36 months | No clinically significant effect on tests of cognitive function. | |
| Maki et al, 2007 [ | 15 normal men | 66–87 | RCT | T enanthate | 3 months | Decreased verbal memory and altered relative activity in medial temporal and prefrontal regions. |
| Cherrier et al, 2007 [ | 57 eugonadal men | 67±11 | RCT | T enanthate i.m. 50, 100, or 300 mg/wk | 6 weeks | No significant changes in memory. |
| Lu et al, 2006 [ | 16 men with mild AD | RCT | T gel (75 mg) | 24 weeks | T replacement therapy improved the quality of life in AD patients. T had minimal effects on cognition. | |
| Haren et al, 2005 [ | 76 healthy men | 60 | RCT | T undecanoate 80 mg twice daily | 12 months | Not affect scores on visuospatial tests or mood and quality of life scales. |
| Kenny et al, 2004 [ | 11 men with cognitive decline | 80±5 | RCT | 200 mg every 3 weeks | 12 weeks | No significant changes in behavior, function, depression, or cognitive performance. |
| Tan et al, 2003 [ | 36 men with AD | RCT | Intramuscular T 200 mg every 2 weeks | 12 months | ADAScog, MMSE, and CDT improved significantly in treated patients. | |
| 10 hypogonadal | ||||||
| O’Connor et al, 2001 [ | 30 healthy eugonadal men and 7 hypogonadal men | RCT | 200 mg of T enanthate i.m. weekly | 8 weeks | Increased T has a differential effect on cognitive function, inhibiting spatial abilities while improving verbal fluency. | |
| Cherrier et al, 2001 [ | 25 healthy men | RCT | T enanthate 100 mg weekly | 6 weeks | Short-term T administration enhances cognitive function. |
AD: Alzheimer’s disease, RCT: randomized controlled trial, T: testosterone, MCI: mild cognitive impairment, GnRH: gonadotropin-releasing hormone, ADAScog: Alzheimer’s Disease Assessment Scale Cognitive Subscale, MMSE: Mini-Mental Status Examination, CDT: clock drawing test.
aValues are presented as mean only or mean±standard deviation.