Longitudinal effects of aging on serum total and free testosterone levels in healthy men

SM Harman, EJ Metter, JD Tobin… - The Journal of …, 2001 - academic.oup.com
SM Harman, EJ Metter, JD Tobin, J Pearson, MR Blackman
The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism, 2001academic.oup.com
Many studies have shown cross-sectional (and two small studies, longitudinal) declines in
total and/or free testosterone (T) levels, with age, in men. The extent to which decline in T is
the result of the aging process per se, as opposed to chronic illness, medication use, and
other age-related factors, remains controversial. The frequency with which aging leads to T
levels consistent with hypogonadism has also not been defined. These issues bear on the
potential use of T replacement in aging men, because aging and hypogonadism have, in …
Many studies have shown cross-sectional (and two small studies, longitudinal) declines in total and/or free testosterone (T) levels, with age, in men. The extent to which decline in T is the result of the aging process per se, as opposed to chronic illness, medication use, and other age-related factors, remains controversial. The frequency with which aging leads to T levels consistent with hypogonadism has also not been defined. These issues bear on the potential use of T replacement in aging men, because aging and hypogonadism have, in common, reduced bone and lean body mass and muscle strength and increased total and abdominal fat. We measured T and sex hormone-binding globulin (SHBG), by RIA, in stored samples from 890 men in the Baltimore Longitudinal Study on Aging. Using a mixed-effects model, we found independent effects of age and date of sampling to reduce T levels. After compensating for date effects, which investigation suggested was artifactual, we observed significant, independent, age-invariant, longitudinal effects of age on both T and free T index (free T index = T/SHBG), with an average change of− 0.124 nmol/L·yr and −0.0049 nmol T/nmol SHBG·yr. T, but not free T index, also decreased with increasing body mass index. Use ofβ− blocking drugs was associated with higher T and higher free T index levels. Using total T criteria, incidence of hypogonadal T levels increased to about 20% of men over 60, 30% over 70 and 50% over 80 yr of age, and even greater percentages when free T index criteria were employed. Our observations of health factor independent, age-related longitudinal decreases in T and free T, resulting in a high frequency of hypogonadal values, suggest that further investigation of T replacement in aged men, perhaps targeted to those with the lowest serum T concentrations, are justified.
Oxford University Press