Short-acting testosterone injections were associated with more strokes, acute coronary syndromes, hospitalization, and death compared with gels or patches in a large observational study.
Overall composite risk of myocardial infarction, angina, and stroke was significantly elevated by 26% compared with transdermal gel across three cohorts in the adjusted analysis, which was significant for each component as well, , an epidemiologist at the University of North Carolina Chapel Hill, and colleagues found.
Injections were also associated with a greater risk for hospitalization (hazard ratio 1.16, 95% CI 1.13-1.19) and death (HR 1.34, 95% CI 1.15-1.56), although not venous thromboembolism (HR 0.92, 95% CI 0.76-1.11).
None of those risks were significantly elevated for testosterone patches compared with gels, the investigators reported online in
The study adds new information to the ongoing controversy and concerns about the safety and proper usage of testosterone therapy. These concerns prompted the FDA to require label changes to testosterone products in March to clarify their approved uses and include a new safety warning.
However, the study published did not include long-acting testosterone formulations commonly used in Europe and recently approved in the U.S., according to one commentator.
In addition, the study drew harsh criticism from the lead author of a recently published large-scale review that concluded there is no convincing evidence of increased cardiovascular risk with testosterone therapy.
Data From Half-Million Men Examined
The analysis included three cohorts: a U.S. cohort of commercially insured men, a random sample from the Medicare population, and a U.K. cohort drawn from , a compilation of general practitioner medical records throughout Great Britain.
Together the three groups included more than 544,000 men who were new users of testosterone therapy. Of these, 37.4% received injections, 6.9% used patches, and 55.8% used gels. These men were followed for up to 1 year for outcomes.
Gels were used as the reference group since gels were the most common dosage form. This study did not compare testosterone users with non-users.
"Different dosage forms lead to different serum testosterone levels over time -- injections result in spikes and super-normal levels -- possibly accounting for the observed risk of cardiovascular disease," Layton and colleagues wrote.
"With continuing concern about the safety and effectiveness of testosterone treatment in men with primary and age-related hypogonadism and the trend of treatment in men with normal testosterone levels or without recent baseline testing, it is important to understand the potential hazards of testosterone treatment," the investigators concluded.
Experts Point to Study's Limitations
The study is well-designed and done by a reputable group, said , an endocrinologist and professor of medicine at the University of Washington Medical Center in Seattle, in an email to 51˶. But it only included short-acting forms of injectable testosterone (testosterone cypionate, enanthate, and propionate) and not the longer-acting testosterone undecanoate which is the most common form used in Europe and which was recently approved in the U.S.
The short-acting forms of injectable testosterone are associated with higher spikes in testosterone levels, said Anawalt, who was not involved with the study.
"I don't think we should change our practice based on this study," Anawalt said. However, he added that for those using short-acting testosterone injections, the study suggests it may be prudent to use lower doses at more frequent intervals.
In addition, Anawalt said that this and previous studies have raised enough questions about the safety of testosterone therapy that physicians should be cautious about using it in men for whom there is no clear medical need.
, of the Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center in Boston, criticized the study harshly.
"The study fails for the most basic of reasons," Morgantaler told MedPage Today via email. "The authors treated all men receiving a testosterone prescription as if this were a homogeneous group and the selection of treatment options (injections, gels, patches) were random. However, multiple factors play a role in the choice of testosterone treatment options, including clinical presentation, testosterone concentrations, and economics (injections are considerably less expensive than patches and gels), none of which are addressed by the authors."
"Moreover, treatment choices also reflect physician experience and expertise, as patches are rarely used by experienced clinicians because of poor efficacy and a high rate of local skin irritation. Since the groups are not the same, one cannot conclude that differences in outcomes are due to the treatment. A more likely conclusion from these data is that inexperienced healthcare providers (identified by use of testosterone patches) tend to treat healthier men at reduced risk of cardiovascular events," Morgantaler said.
Morgantaler and colleagues recently published a review in that concluded there was no link between testosterone therapy and cardiovascular risk. However, Morgantaler and his colleagues have been criticized for their connections with companies that make testosterone products.
In the Mayo Clinic Proceedings paper, Morgentaler had disclosed relationships with AbbVie, Auxilium, Clarus Therapeutics, Endo Pharmaceuticals, TesoRx, Antares, Lipocine, Eli Lilly, Bayer, Pfizer, and MHB Labs.
Disclosures
The study was supported by the National Institute on Aging.
Layton and most co-authors disclosed no relevant relationships with industry. One co-author disclosed relevant relationships with Amgen, Merck, GlaxoSmithKline, RxAnte, and World Health Information Consultants.
Anawalt disclosed serving on the Endocrine Society council. He disclosed no relevant relationships with industry.
Primary Source
JAMA Internal Medicine
Layton JB, et al "Comparative safety of testosterone dosage forms" JAMA Intern Med 2015; DOI: 10.1001/jamainternmed.2015.1573.