Low-dose human chorionic gonadotropin maintains intratesticular testosterone in normal men with testosterone-induced gonadotropin suppression
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Date
Authors
Yan, Xiaohua
Herbst, Karen L.
Sutton, Paul R.
Bremner, William J.
Wright, William W.
Anawalt, Bradley D.
Amory, John K.
Brown, Terry R.
Jarow, Jonathan P.
Zirkin, Barry R.
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Endocrine Society
Abstract
In previous studies of testicular biopsy tissue from healthy men,
intratesticular testosterone (ITT) has been shown to be much higher than
serum testosterone (T), suggesting that high ITT is needed relative to
serum T for normal spermatogenesis in men. However, the quantitative
relationship between ITT and spermatogenesis is not known. To begin to
address this issue experimentally, we determined the dose-response
relationship between human chorionic gonadotropin (hCG) and ITT to
ascertain the minimum dose needed to maintain ITT in the normal range.
Twenty-nine men with normal reproductive physiology were randomized to
receive 200 mg T enanthate weekly in combination with either saline
placebo or 125, 250, or 500 IU hCG every other day for 3 wk. ITT was
assessed in testicular fluid obtained by percutaneous fine needle
aspiration at baseline and at the end of treatment. Baseline serum T (14.1
nmol/liter) was 1.2% of ITT (1174 nmol/liter). LH and FSH were profoundly
suppressed to 5% and 3% of baseline, respectively, and ITT was suppressed
by 94% (1234 to 72 nmol/liter) in the T enanthate/placebo group. ITT
increased linearly with increasing hCG dose (P < 0.001). Posttreatment ITT
was 25% less than baseline in the 125 IU hCG group, 7% less than baseline
in the 250 IU hCG group, and 26% greater than baseline in the 500 IU hCG
group. These results demonstrate that relatively low dose hCG maintains
ITT within the normal range in healthy men with gonadotropin suppression.
Extensions of this study will allow determination of the ITT concentration
threshold required to maintain spermatogenesis in man.
Description
Citation
J Clin Endocrinol Metab. 2005 May;90(5):2595-602. Epub 2005 Feb 15.
