Sex steroids and androgen biomarkers in the healthy man study: within-person variability and impact of fasting

Author:

Handelsman David J12ORCID,Sartorius Gideon3,Desai Reena1,Idan Amanda2,Turner Leo2,Savkovic Sasha2,Ly Lam P2,Forbes Elise4,Allan Carolyn A4,McLachlan Robert4,Conway Ann J2

Affiliation:

1. ANZAC Research Institute, University of Sydney , Sydney, NSW 2139 , Australia

2. Andrology Department, Concord Hospital , Sydney, NSW 2139 , Australia

3. Fertisuisse , CH-4051 Basel , Switzerland

4. Hudson Institute, Monash University , Melbourne, VIC 3168 , Australia

Abstract

Abstract Objective Serum testosterone measurements in clinical practice mostly utilize “direct” (non-extraction) immunoassays which have method-specific bias due to steroid cross-reactivity and nonspecific matrix artifacts. Although more accurate, sensitive, and specific liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry (LCMS) dominates in clinical research, the within-person variability of serum testosterone in healthy men using LCMS measurement is not reported. Design Longitudinal multi-sampling observational study of men in excellent health over 3 months. Methods Elite healthy men (n = 325) over 40 years of age in excellent, asymptomatic health provided 9 blood samples over 3 months with serum testosterone, dihydrotestosterone (DHT), estradiol (E2), and estrone (E1) measured by validated LCMS with conventional biochemical and anthropometric variables. Results Quantitative estimates of within-person variability within day and between day, week, month, and quarter were stable other than an increase due to fasting. The androgen biomarkers most sensitive to age and testosterone among widely used biochemical and anthropometric variables in middle-aged and older men were identified. Conclusions This study provides estimates of variability in serum testosterone and the best androgen biomarkers that may prove useful for future studies of androgen action in male ageing.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Endocrinology,General Medicine,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism

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