Androgens and Selective Androgen Receptor Modulators to Treat Functional Limitations Associated With Aging and Chronic Disease

Author:

Bhasin Shalender1ORCID,Krishnan Venkatesh2,Storer Thomas W1,Steiner Mitchell3,Dobs Adrian S4

Affiliation:

1. Research Program in Men’s Health: Aging and Metabolism, Claude D. Pepper Older Americans Independence Center, Brigham and Women’s Hospital , Boston, Massachusetts, USA

2. Lilly Research Laboratories, Lilly Corporate Center , Indianapolis, Indiana, USA

3. Veru , Miami, Florida, USA

4. Johns Hopkins Clinical Research Network, Division of Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism, The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine , Baltimore, Maryland, USA

Abstract

Abstract Testosterone, many steroidal androgens, and nonsteroidal ligands that bind to androgen receptor and exert tissue-specific transcriptional activity (selective androgen receptor modulators [SARMs]) are being developed as function-promoting therapies to treat functional limitations associated with aging and chronic diseases. This narrative review describes preclinical studies, mechanisms, and randomized trials of testosterone, other androgens, and nonsteroidal SARMs. Sex differences in muscle mass and strength and empiric use of anabolic steroids by athletes to increase muscularity and athletic performance provide supportive evidence of testosterone’s anabolic effects. In randomized trials, testosterone treatment increases lean body mass, muscle strength, leg power, aerobic capacity, and self-reported mobility. These anabolic effects have been reported in healthy men, hypogonadal men, older men with mobility limitation and chronic diseases, menopausal women, and HIV-infected women with weight loss. Testosterone has not consistently improved walking speed. Testosterone treatment increases volumetric and areal bone mineral density, and estimated bone strength; improves sexual desire, erectile function, and sexual activity; modestly improves depressive symptoms; and corrects unexplained anemia in older men with low testosterone levels. Prior studies have not been of sufficient size or duration to determine testosterone’s cardiovascular and prostate safety. The efficacy of testosterone in reducing physical limitations, fractures, falls, progression to diabetes, and correcting late-onset persistent depressive disorder remains to be established. Strategies to translate androgen-induced muscle mass and strength gains into functional improvements are needed. Future studies should evaluate the efficacy of combined administration of testosterone (or a SARM) plus multidimensional functional exercise to induce neuromuscular adaptations required for meaningful functional improvements.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

Boston Claude D. Pepper Older Americans Independence Center

National Institute on Aging

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Geriatrics and Gerontology,Aging

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