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Effects of testosterone therapy on sleep and breathing in obese men with severe obstructive sleep apnoea: a randomized placebo-controlled trial.

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Published:30th Sep 2012
Author: Hoyos CM, Killick R, Yee BJ, Grunstein RR, Liu PY.
Availability: Free full text
Ref.:Clin Endocrinol (Oxf). 2012 Oct;77(4):599-607.
DOI:10.1111/j.1365-2265.2012.04413.x.
Effects of testosterone therapy on sleep and breathing in obese men with severe obstructive sleep apnoea: a randomized placebo-controlled trial


Study Objectives:
High doses of short-term testosterone have been shown to acutely worsen sleep-disordered breathing in men with obstructive sleep apnoea (OSA). The effects of lower, near-conventional doses of testosterone in obese men with OSA may differ over the longer term but have not been systematically studied. We assessed sleep and breathing effects of near-conventional testosterone treatment as an adjunct to weight loss in obese men with severe OSA.

Design: An 18-week randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, parallel group trial in 67 men.

Interventions: All subjects were placed on a hypocaloric diet and then received intramuscular injections of 1000 mg testosterone undecanoate or placebo at 0, 6 and 12 weeks.

Measurements and Results: Sleep and breathing were measured by nocturnal polysomnography at 0, 7 and 18 weeks. Testosterone, compared to placebo, worsened the oxygen desaturation index (ODI) by 10·3 events/h (95%CI, 0·8-19·8 events/h; P = 0·03) and nocturnal hypoxaemia (sleep time with oxygen saturation <90%, SpO(2) T90%) by 6·1% (95%CI, 1·5-10·6; P = 0·01) at 7 weeks. Testosterone therapy did not alter ODI (4·5, -5·4 to 14·4 events/h; P = 0·36) or SpO(2) T90% at 18 weeks (2·9, -1·9-7·7%; P = 0·23) compared to placebo. The testosterone treatment effects on ODI and SpO(2) T90% were not influenced by baseline testosterone concentrations (testosterone by treatment interactions, all P > 0·35). Blood testosterone concentrations did not correlate with ODI or SpO(2) T90% (all P > 0·19).

Conclusions: Testosterone therapy in obese men with severe OSA mildly worsens sleep-disordered breathing in a time-limited manner, irrespective of initial testosterone concentrations. This time-dependency was not related to testosterone concentrations.


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