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Impact of Testosterone Therapy on Hematocrit and Polycythemia: Evaluation of Data From Two Ongoing Open-Label Randomized Single-Center Clinical Trials
Introduction & Objective: Testosterone (T) replacement therapy (TRT) is the mainstay treatment for male hypogonadism. The most commonly reported adverse event among men using TRT is polycythemia. What is unknown is whether the short-acting vs. long-acting testosterone preparations have different...
Autores principales: | , , , , , , |
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Formato: | Online Artículo Texto |
Lenguaje: | English |
Publicado: |
Oxford University Press
2021
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Materias: | |
Acceso en línea: | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8090421/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/jendso/bvab048.1544 |
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author | Gonzalez, Daniel Kresch, Eliyahu Ory, Jesse Nackeeran, Sirpi Blachman-Braun, Ruben Molina, Manuel Ramasamy, Ranjith |
author_facet | Gonzalez, Daniel Kresch, Eliyahu Ory, Jesse Nackeeran, Sirpi Blachman-Braun, Ruben Molina, Manuel Ramasamy, Ranjith |
author_sort | Gonzalez, Daniel |
collection | PubMed |
description | Introduction & Objective: Testosterone (T) replacement therapy (TRT) is the mainstay treatment for male hypogonadism. The most commonly reported adverse event among men using TRT is polycythemia. What is unknown is whether the short-acting vs. long-acting testosterone preparations have different effects on hematocrit. We hypothesized that short-acting testosterone therapy will be physiologic and have lesser effect on hematocrit compared to long-acting TRT. We evaluated data from two simultaneous ongoing open-label, randomized, two-arm clinical trials to evaluate the impact of TRT on Hematocrit and compared prevalence rates of polycythemia among subcutaneous T pellets (long-acting) and Intranasal Testosterone (Natesto) or Intramuscular Testosterone cypionate (TC) (short-acting). Subject and Methods: Hypogonadal men (2 AM serum T < 300 ng/dL assayed by LC-MS/MS) aged 18-65 years were randomized into open-label randomized clinical trials. Eligible subjects received: Trial 1: 800mg subcutaneous Testopel T pellets; Trial 2: 11mg TID Intranasal testosterone (Natesto) or 200mg x 2 weeks TC for 2 months. Serum T, Hematocrit (HCT), and prevalence of polycythemia (as defined as HCT >50%) were collected at baseline and after 2 months of therapy. Data are presented as a post-hoc analysis of the two randomized clinical trials and reported as median and interquartile range [25(th)-75(th)], paired sample analysis (baseline versus follow-up) was performed with the Wilcoxon rank test to determine change during time within the different TRT modalities, with p<0.05 considered significant. Results: Median change for serum T between baseline and 2mo follow-up to subcutaneous T pellets was 542 [454-757] ng/dL, Intranasal Testosterone 706 [517-1010] ng/dL, and TC 525 [280-712]ng/dL. T pellets showed a statistically significant increase in HCT from 44.6 [42.0-46.6] to 46.7 [42.6-48.9] (p<0.001), with a prevalence of 7/47 (14%) men developing polycythemia. A safety trigger for HCT greater than 54% occurred in 2/47 (4%). The treatment effect was independent of baseline serum testosterone. TRT with Natesto decreased HCT, from 43.4 [41.6-46.1] to 43.4 [40.6-46.5], however not statistically significant (p=0.262). TC statistically increased HCT from 41.6 [40.3-43.1] to 43.8 [43.5-47.4] (p=0.018), with 0% of men developing polycythemia in both groups. Conclusions: Long acting TRT appears to increase hematocrit compared to short-acting testosterone therapies. Treatment of hypogonadal men with Intranasal T Natesto and testosterone cypionate successfully achieved target serum T level and maintained HCT levels. Longer-term durability and safety effects of the intervention remain to be further investigated. |
format | Online Article Text |
id | pubmed-8090421 |
institution | National Center for Biotechnology Information |
language | English |
publishDate | 2021 |
publisher | Oxford University Press |
record_format | MEDLINE/PubMed |
spelling | pubmed-80904212021-05-06 Impact of Testosterone Therapy on Hematocrit and Polycythemia: Evaluation of Data From Two Ongoing Open-Label Randomized Single-Center Clinical Trials Gonzalez, Daniel Kresch, Eliyahu Ory, Jesse Nackeeran, Sirpi Blachman-Braun, Ruben Molina, Manuel Ramasamy, Ranjith J Endocr Soc Reproductive Endocrinology Introduction & Objective: Testosterone (T) replacement therapy (TRT) is the mainstay treatment for male hypogonadism. The most commonly reported adverse event among men using TRT is polycythemia. What is unknown is whether the short-acting vs. long-acting testosterone preparations have different effects on hematocrit. We hypothesized that short-acting testosterone therapy will be physiologic and have lesser effect on hematocrit compared to long-acting TRT. We evaluated data from two simultaneous ongoing open-label, randomized, two-arm clinical trials to evaluate the impact of TRT on Hematocrit and compared prevalence rates of polycythemia among subcutaneous T pellets (long-acting) and Intranasal Testosterone (Natesto) or Intramuscular Testosterone cypionate (TC) (short-acting). Subject and Methods: Hypogonadal men (2 AM serum T < 300 ng/dL assayed by LC-MS/MS) aged 18-65 years were randomized into open-label randomized clinical trials. Eligible subjects received: Trial 1: 800mg subcutaneous Testopel T pellets; Trial 2: 11mg TID Intranasal testosterone (Natesto) or 200mg x 2 weeks TC for 2 months. Serum T, Hematocrit (HCT), and prevalence of polycythemia (as defined as HCT >50%) were collected at baseline and after 2 months of therapy. Data are presented as a post-hoc analysis of the two randomized clinical trials and reported as median and interquartile range [25(th)-75(th)], paired sample analysis (baseline versus follow-up) was performed with the Wilcoxon rank test to determine change during time within the different TRT modalities, with p<0.05 considered significant. Results: Median change for serum T between baseline and 2mo follow-up to subcutaneous T pellets was 542 [454-757] ng/dL, Intranasal Testosterone 706 [517-1010] ng/dL, and TC 525 [280-712]ng/dL. T pellets showed a statistically significant increase in HCT from 44.6 [42.0-46.6] to 46.7 [42.6-48.9] (p<0.001), with a prevalence of 7/47 (14%) men developing polycythemia. A safety trigger for HCT greater than 54% occurred in 2/47 (4%). The treatment effect was independent of baseline serum testosterone. TRT with Natesto decreased HCT, from 43.4 [41.6-46.1] to 43.4 [40.6-46.5], however not statistically significant (p=0.262). TC statistically increased HCT from 41.6 [40.3-43.1] to 43.8 [43.5-47.4] (p=0.018), with 0% of men developing polycythemia in both groups. Conclusions: Long acting TRT appears to increase hematocrit compared to short-acting testosterone therapies. Treatment of hypogonadal men with Intranasal T Natesto and testosterone cypionate successfully achieved target serum T level and maintained HCT levels. Longer-term durability and safety effects of the intervention remain to be further investigated. Oxford University Press 2021-05-03 /pmc/articles/PMC8090421/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/jendso/bvab048.1544 Text en © The Author(s) 2021. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Endocrine Society. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/) ), which permits non-commercial reproduction and distribution of the work, in any medium, provided the original work is not altered or transformed in any way, and that the work is properly cited. For commercial re-use, please contact journals.permissions@oup.com |
spellingShingle | Reproductive Endocrinology Gonzalez, Daniel Kresch, Eliyahu Ory, Jesse Nackeeran, Sirpi Blachman-Braun, Ruben Molina, Manuel Ramasamy, Ranjith Impact of Testosterone Therapy on Hematocrit and Polycythemia: Evaluation of Data From Two Ongoing Open-Label Randomized Single-Center Clinical Trials |
title | Impact of Testosterone Therapy on Hematocrit and Polycythemia: Evaluation of Data From Two Ongoing Open-Label Randomized Single-Center Clinical Trials |
title_full | Impact of Testosterone Therapy on Hematocrit and Polycythemia: Evaluation of Data From Two Ongoing Open-Label Randomized Single-Center Clinical Trials |
title_fullStr | Impact of Testosterone Therapy on Hematocrit and Polycythemia: Evaluation of Data From Two Ongoing Open-Label Randomized Single-Center Clinical Trials |
title_full_unstemmed | Impact of Testosterone Therapy on Hematocrit and Polycythemia: Evaluation of Data From Two Ongoing Open-Label Randomized Single-Center Clinical Trials |
title_short | Impact of Testosterone Therapy on Hematocrit and Polycythemia: Evaluation of Data From Two Ongoing Open-Label Randomized Single-Center Clinical Trials |
title_sort | impact of testosterone therapy on hematocrit and polycythemia: evaluation of data from two ongoing open-label randomized single-center clinical trials |
topic | Reproductive Endocrinology |
url | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8090421/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/jendso/bvab048.1544 |
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