Author:
Corona Giovanni,Rastrelli Giulia,Monami Matteo,Saad Farid,Luconi Michaela,Lucchese Marcello,Facchiano Enrico,Sforza Alessandra,Forti Gianni,Mannucci Edoardo,Maggi Mario
Abstract
ObjectiveFew randomized clinical studies have evaluated the impact of diet and physical activity on testosterone levels in obese men with conflicting results. Conversely, studies on bariatric surgery in men generally have shown an increase in testosterone levels. The aim of this study is to perform a systematic review and meta-analysis of available trials on the effect of body weight loss on sex hormones levels.DesignMeta-analysis.MethodsAn extensive Medline search was performed including the following words: ‘testosterone’, ‘diet’, ‘weight loss’, ‘bariatric surgery’, and ‘males’. The search was restricted to data from January 1, 1969 up to August 31, 2012.ResultsOut of 266 retrieved articles, 24 were included in the study. Of the latter, 22 evaluated the effect of diet or bariatric surgery, whereas two compared diet and bariatric surgery. Overall, both a low-calorie diet and bariatric surgery are associated with a significant (P<0.0001) increase in plasma sex hormone-binding globulin-bound and -unbound testosterone levels (total testosterone (TT)), with bariatric surgery being more effective in comparison with the low-calorie diet (TT increase: 8.73 (6.51–10.95) vs 2.87 (1.68–4.07) for bariatric surgery and the low-calorie diet, respectively; both P<0.0001 vs baseline). Androgen rise is greater in those patients who lose more weight as well as in younger, non-diabetic subjects with a greater degree of obesity. Body weight loss is also associated with a decrease in estradiol and an increase in gonadotropins levels. Multiple regression analysis shows that the degree of body weight loss is the best determinant of TT rise (B=2.50±0.98, P=0.029).ConclusionsThese data show that weight loss is associated with an increase in both bound and unbound testosterone levels. The normalization of sex hormones induced by body weight loss is a possible mechanism contributing to the beneficial effects of surgery in morbid obesity.
Subject
Endocrinology,General Medicine,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism
Cited by
332 articles.
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