Serum inhibin concentrations before and during gonadotropin treatment in men with hypogonadotropic hypogonadism: physiological and clinical implications
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Date
Authors
Snyder, Peter J.
Bremner, William J.
McLachlan, Robert I.
Finkel, David M.
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
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Publisher
Endocrine Society
Abstract
We measured by RIA the inhibin concentrations in the sera of 20 men with
hypogonadotropic hypogonadism before and during treatment with
gonadotropins in order to determine the role of gonadotropins in the
control of inhibin secretion and the utility of the serum inhibin
concentration in assessing the spermatogenic response to gonadotropin
treatment in these patients. Before treatment the mean serum inhibin
concentration in the 20 hypogonadotropic men as a group (391 +/- 49 U/L)
was significantly lower (P less than 0.001) than that in 27 normal men
(741 +/- 52 U/L). In the 7 men whose hypogonadism was of postpubertal
onset, the mean serum inhibin concentration (559 +/- 69 U/L) was not
significantly lower than that in normal men. In the 13 men whose
hypogonadism was of prepubertal onset, the serum inhibin level was
significantly lower [381 +/- 74 U/L (P less than 0.01) in the 7 without a
history of cryptorchidism and 207 +/- 46 U/L (P less than 0.01) in the 6
with a history of cryptorchidism]. All 20 patients were azoospermic or
severely oligospermic and had distinctly subnormal serum testosterone
concentrations, even those whose serum inhibin values were normal. In the
7 patients with postpubertal hypogonadism, treatment with hCG alone for 6
months increased the serum testosterone concentration and maximum sperm
count to normal, even though the previously normal inhibin concentration
was not increased further. In the 13 patients with prepubertal
hypogonadism, treatment with hCG alone increased the serum inhibin
concentration, and combined treatment with hCG and human menopausal
gonadotropin (hMG) increased inhibin further, to well within the normal
range (742 +/- 143 U/L) in the patients without a history of
cryptorchidism and to just within the normal range (487 +/- 96 U/L) in
those with such a history. In the 7 patients with prepubertal hypogonadism
but no history of cryptorchidism, treatment with hCG and hMG increased the
maximum sperm count to normal in 5. In the 6 patients with prepubertal
hypogonadism who did have a history of cryptorchidism, hCG and hMG
treatment produced a normal sperm count in only 1. Of 12 patients whose
serum inhibin level was more than 300 U/L before treatment, 11 developed a
normal maximum sperm count in response to treatment, but of 8 patients
whose inhibin concentration was less than 300 U/L before treatment, only 2
developed a normal sperm count in response to treatment (P less than
0.01).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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Citation
J Clin Endocrinol Metab. 1990 May;70(5):1414-9
