Relationship between serum gonadotropins and spermatogenic suppression in men undergoing steroidal contraceptive treatment
Loading...
Date
Authors
Ugoni, Antony
Bremner, William J.
Pruysers, Enid
Meriggiola, M. Cristina
Anawalt, Bradley D.
Matsumoto, Alvin M.
McLachlan, Robert I.
Robertson, David M.
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Endocrine Society
Abstract
This study aimed to establish whether the degree of suppression of serum
FSH and LH was related to sperm concentration in three testosterone (T)
plus progestin contraceptive regimens. We measured serum FSH and LH using
a modified, highly sensitive immunofluorometric assay in samples obtained
from three published studies using T enanthate (TE; 100 and 200 mg weekly)
plus daily oral doses of cyproterone acetate (CPA; 5-100 mg),
levonogestrel (LNG; 150-500 micro g), or desogestrel (DSG; 150-300 micro
g). Overall, men with sperm concentrations below 0.1 million/ml had
significantly lower gonadotropin levels (serum FSH, approximately 0.12
IU/liter; serum LH, approximately 0.05 IU/liter) than oligospermic men
(sperm concentrations, 0.1-5 million/ml; serum FSH, 0.23-0.5 IU/liter;
serum LH, 0.05-0.56 IU/liter), but the relationship was weak, indicating
the possible existence of other determinants. Multivariate logistic
regression was used to identify the influence of candidate predictors of
spermatogenic effects of the T plus progestin regimens. In the LNG and DSG
studies, the marked suppression of serum LH to less than 5% of baseline
values (<0.15 IU/liter) was a consistent and highly significant predictor
of sperm concentration (reduced to 2-7% that seen at higher LH levels) and
the likelihood of its suppression below 1 million/ml (a proposed threshold
for contraceptive efficacy). Serum FSH was not a significant independent
predictor. The use of DSG and CPA (but not LNG) was a significant
independent predictor of sperm suppression, and regimens that contained
200 mg TE weekly caused less spermatogenic suppression than 100 mg TE
weekly. These findings suggest that T-progestin contraceptive regimens
suppress sperm concentration by gonadotropin-dependent and -independent
mechanisms. The suppression of serum LH is a major predictor of the
suppression of sperm concentration suppression in the LNG and DSG
treatment studies. On the other hand, the greater spermatogenic
suppression in regimens containing DSG or CPA suggests that these
progestins have additional actions to suppress spermatogenesis via a
gonadotropin-independent mechanism(s)
Description
Citation
J Clin Endocrinol Metab. 2004 Jan;89(1):142-9
