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Serum Testosterone Levels After Cardiac Transplantation

Overview
Journal Transplantation
Specialty General Surgery
Date 2008 Mar 25
PMID 18360264
Citations 8
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Abstract

Background: Men undergoing heart transplantation during the early 1990s had declines in testosterone associated with rapid bone loss. It is unclear whether low testosterone still occurs in an era of lower prednisone doses, whether cyclosporine A (CsA) contributes, whether hypothalamic-pituitary-gonadal (HPG) suppression or direct testicular effects are responsible, and whether low testosterone influences bone loss in men receiving therapy to prevent osteoporosis.

Methods: Serum testosterone, estradiol, sex hormone binding globulin, gonadotropins, and bone density were measured and prednisone and CsA doses and levels for the first 2 years after transplantation were recorded in a more recently transplanted cohort of 108 participants in a trial comparing alendronate and calcitriol for prevention of posttransplant osteoporosis.

Results: Total and free testosterone levels were lowest during the first month (257+/-131 and 6.2+/-3 ng/dL, respectively) and normalized by 2 months. Gonadotropins were low in the majority, suggesting HPG suppression. Low total testosterone persisted in 14% at 1 year and 18% at 2 years. Prednisone was the major predictor of serum testosterone. No adverse effect of CsA and no relationship between serum testosterone and bone density change were detected.

Conclusions: Low serum testosterone levels still occur in the early posttransplant period, probably related to HPG suppression by prednisone rather than direct testicular effects of CsA. They are not associated with bone loss in men receiving therapies to prevent osteoporosis. At later time points, low testosterone levels are common and apparently related to primary gonadal dysfunction, suggesting that long-term male heart transplant recipients should be evaluated for hypogonadism.

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