The relationship between hematologic malignancies on male hypogonadism: a scoping review

Author:

Roth Bradley1,Moukhtar Hammad Muhammed A1,Sanford Daniel I2,Piper Molly3,Barham David W4,Yafi Faysal A1,Jenkins Lawrence C15

Affiliation:

1. Department of Urology, University of California , Irvine, Irvine 92697, CA, United States

2. Department of Urology, Brown University , Providence 02905, RI, United States

3. Penn State College of Medicine , Hershey 17033, PA, United States

4. Brooke Army Medical Center AHP, Fort Sam Houston , San Antonio 78234, TX, United States

5. Tulane University, Department of Urology, New Orleans, New Orleans 70112, LA, United States

Abstract

Abstract Introduction The associated symptoms of hypogonadism have been reported in patients with various types of cancer. However, the prevalence and significance of hypogonadism among certain hematologic malignancies have not been completely summarized in recent literature. Objective In this review we aimed to examine the current literature on hypogonadism in patients with hematologic malignancies, with emphasis on leukemias, lymphomas, and multiple myeloma (MM). Methods This review included relevant studies published before July 2023 that were retrieved through a search of PubMed using the keywords “hematologic cancer,” “hematologic malignancy,” blood cancer,” “leukemia,” “lymphoma,” “hypogonadism,” “multiple myeloma,” and “testosterone.” Results The search yielded 214 studies, of which 21 met the inclusion criteria. Commonly reported findings were that patients who had received hematopoietic stem cell therapy for acute lymphoblastic leukemia and acute myelogenous leukemia as children had laboratory-confirmed hypogonadism as adults. However, the impact of these diseases on hypogonadal symptoms was variable in these studies. Studies reporting on lymphoma and hypogonadism had mixed results, with some studies finding that the degree of cytotoxic chemotherapy was associated with hypogonadism, while others showed no correlation. Regardless, multiple studies found that hypogonadism secondary to lymphoma treatment and symptoms of hypogonadism had no apparent association. The most comprehensive assessment of the frequency of hypogonadism in an MM cohort found that 74% of 561 MM patients were classified as hypogonadal compared to 33% of patients in a control population. Testosterone supplementation was found to lower interleukin-6 levels, which could potentially help manage some of the adverse effects of MM, including decreased bone mineral density. Conclusion There is a relationship between hematologic malignancies and hypogonadism, which is likely multifactorial. In this review we established that the most plausible factors are related to the secondary effects of gonadotoxic treatments and/or systemic inflammatory responses to the diseases.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Reference56 articles.

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