Age trends in the level of serum testosterone and other hormones in middle-aged men: longitudinal results from the Massachusetts male aging study
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Date
Authors
Johannes, Catherine B.
Bremner, William J.
Derby, Carol A.
McKinlay, John B.
Coviello, Andrea D.
Araujo, Andre B.
Feldman, Henry A.
Longcope, Christopher
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Endocrine Society
Abstract
We used longitudinal data from the Massachusetts Male Aging Study, a large
population-based random-sample cohort of men aged 40-70 yr at baseline, to
establish normative age trends for serum level of T and related hormones
in middle-aged men and to test whether general health status affected the
age trends. Of 1,709 men enrolled in 1987-1989, 1,156 were followed up
7-10 yr afterward. By repeated-measures statistical analysis, we estimated
simultaneously the cross-sectional age trend of each hormone between
subjects within the baseline data, the cross-sectional trend between
subjects within the follow-up data, and the longitudinal trend within
subjects between baseline and follow-up. Total T declined
cross-sectionally at 0.8%/yr of age within the follow-up data, whereas
both free and albumin-bound T declined at about 2%/yr, all significantly
more steeply than within the baseline data. Sex hormone-binding globulin
increased cross-sectionally at 1.6%/yr in the follow-up data, similarly to
baseline. The longitudinal decline within subjects between baseline and
follow-up was considerably steeper than the cross-sectional trend within
measurement times for total T (1.6%/yr) and bioavailable T (2-3%/yr).
Dehydroepiandrosterone, dehydroepiandrosterone sulfate, cortisol, and
estrone showed significant longitudinal declines, whereas
dihydrotestosterone, pituitary gonadotropins, and PRL rose longitudinally.
Apparent good health, defined as absence of chronic illness, prescription
medication, obesity, or excessive drinking, added 10-15% to the level of
several androgens and attenuated the cross-sectional trends in T and LH
but did not otherwise affect longitudinal or cross-sectional trends. The
paradoxical finding that longitudinal age trends were steeper than
cross-sectional trends suggests that incident poor health may accelerate
the age-related decline in androgen levels.
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Citation
J Clin Endocrinol Metab. 2002 Feb;87(2):589-98
