Conference Coverage

Declining androgen levels correlated with increased frailty


 

REPORTING FROM ENDO 2018


Investigators used the mean of 60 years old to adjust for age, Dr. Wu explained in response to a question from the audience; however, this may have been an overadjustment as free testosterone and DHEA-S are age dependent, Dr. Wu admitted.

Investigators also incorporated a frailty index of 39 health deficits – 16 physical or cognitive, 11 comorbidities, and 12 clinical – measuring on a 0-1 scale in order to measure different levels of frailty.

While the link between these androgens and frailty are evident, the potential benefits of hormonal intervention in elderly men are still in the air and demand further study.

“The decline in androgen levels in the physiological range, because of the modest degree of change, is unlikely to be the single greatest cause of deterioration in the majority of aging men in the population,” said Dr. Wu. “Therefore, the possible therapeutic roles of androgens in improving physical health may be limited to a minority of men with very low levels of testosterone.”

Pages

Recommended Reading

Early births stress dads too
MDedge Internal Medicine
Ciprofloxacin cured gyrA wild-type Neisseria gonorrhoeae infections
MDedge Internal Medicine
From cells to socioeconomics, meth worsens HIV outcomes
MDedge Internal Medicine
Still too early to determine impact of 1-year deferral for MSM blood donors
MDedge Internal Medicine
Abstract: Reconciling the Effects of Screening on Prostate Cancer Mortality in the ERSPC and PLCO Trials
MDedge Internal Medicine
Free testosterone linked to frailty in older men
MDedge Internal Medicine
Without reliability, testosterone testing may fall short
MDedge Internal Medicine
VIDEO: Researchers closing in on the elusive ‘male pill’
MDedge Internal Medicine
MDedge Daily News: Stem cells may reverse premature menopause
MDedge Internal Medicine
Sexual harassment, violence is our problem, too
MDedge Internal Medicine