Hmmm, better walking ability and less depression. That might be useful post stroke. Don't start taking this on your own.
Testosterone gel shown for first time to benefit men over 65
The University of Pittsburgh Graduate School of Public Health was among a dozen sites nationwide to participate in the first clinical trial to show that testosterone treatment for men aged 65 and older improves sexual function, walking ability and mood.
Results of The Testosterone Trials (TTrials), led by the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania and funded by the National Institutes of Health (NIH), will be published in tomorrow’s New England Journal of Medicine.
“Previous testosterone trials in older men yielded equivocal and
inconsistent results,” said coauthor and chair of the TTrials
recruitment committee, Jane A. Cauley, Dr.P.H., professor in Pitt Public Health’s Department of Epidemiology and
principal investigator at the study’s Pittsburgh site. “We showed that
testosterone improved men’s impression that their sexual function and
walking ability had improved, suggesting that these effects are
clinically important.”
The TTrials are a coordinated group of seven trials testing the
effect of a testosterone gel compared with a placebo gel, and
researchers have analyzed the results of the three primary trials –
sexual function, physical function and vitality. They found that
testosterone treatment increased the blood testosterone level in the men
65 and older to levels comparable to mid-normal for young men.
Testosterone also improved all aspects of sexual function, including
sexual activity, sexual desire and the ability to get an erection.
Testosterone treatment did not significantly improve distance walked in
six minutes when only men enrolled in the physical function trial were
considered, but did increase the distance walked when all men in the
TTrials were considered. The treatment did not improve energy, but did
improve mood and depressive symptoms.
“The results of the TTrials show for the first time that
testosterone treatment of older men who have unequivocally low
testosterone levels does have some benefit,” said lead author and
principal investigator of the TTrials Peter J. Snyder, M.D., a professor
in the Division of Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism at Penn.
“However, decisions about testosterone treatment for these men also will
depend on the results of the other four trials – cognitive function,
bone, cardiovascular and anemia – and the risks of testosterone
treatment.”
In 2003, the Institute of Medicine reported
that there was insufficient evidence to support any beneficial effect
of testosterone in such men. This report was the impetus for TTrials,
which are now the largest trials to examine the efficacy of testosterone
treatment in men 65 and older whose testosterone levels are low due
seemingly to age alone. TTrials researchers screened 51,085 men to find
790 who qualified with a sufficiently low testosterone level and who met
other criteria; 78 of the men were enrolled from the Pittsburgh area.
The men enrolled were randomized into two groups: one to apply the
daily testosterone gel and the other a daily placebo gel, for one year.
Efficacy was then evaluated at months three, six, nine and 12. Sexual
function was assessed by questionnaires; physical function was measured
by questionnaires and the distance walked in six minutes; and vitality,
mood and depressive symptoms also were evaluated using questionnaires.
Across the three trials, adverse events – including heart attack,
stroke, other cardiovascular events and prostate conditions – were
similar in men who received testosterone and those who received placebo.
However, the number of men in the TTrials was too small to draw
conclusions about the risk of testosterone treatment, which the
researchers say would require a larger and longer trial.
The TTrials were conducted at 11 additional medical centers across
the country: Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Baylor College of
Medicine, Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Harbor-UCL Medical Center,
University of Alabama at Birmingham, Northwestern University Feinberg
School of Medicine, Puget Sound Health Care System, University of
California at San Diego School of Medicine, University of Florida School
of Medicine, University of Minnesota School of Medicine and Yale School
of Medicine.
The TTrials were supported by NIH National Institute on Aging grant
U01 AG030644, and supplemented by funds from the National Heart, Lung,
and Blood Institute, National Institute of Neurological Diseases and
Stroke, and National Institute of Child Health and Human Development. AbbVie
(formerly Solvay and Abbot Laboratories) also provided funding,
AndroGel and placebo gel, but did not participate in the design or
conduct of the trials, nor analysis or reporting of the data.
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