1 / 20

Background

The Prevalence of Male Hypotestosteronism in Type 2 Diabetics in a Southwest Virginia Population Dr. Eric Hofmeister Dr. Christopher Bishop. Background. Several studies have demonstrated a high prevalence of hypotestosteronism in males with T2DM.

Download Presentation

Background

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The Prevalence of Male Hypotestosteronism in Type 2 Diabetics in a Southwest Virginia PopulationDr. Eric HofmeisterDr. Christopher Bishop

  2. Background • Several studies have demonstrated a high prevalence of hypotestosteronism in males with T2DM. • The Hypotestosteronism in Males (HIM) study reported the prevalence of hypogonadism in males with T2DM to be 50%

  3. The HIM Study • 2162 eligible men > 45 years visiting primary care practices in the United States • Serum testosterone assessment by a single morning blood draw • Hypogonadism defined as total testosterone level < 300 ng/dL with one or more symptoms • Prevalence of hypogonadism in males with T2DM was 50%

  4. Hypothesis • The prevalence of male hypotestosteronism within our local Southwest Virginia population is greater than 50%

  5. Objective • Determine the Prevalence of hypotestosteronism in males with type II diabetes mellitus (T2DM) within a local population in Southwest Virginia.

  6. Design • Non-randomized retrospective analysis • 13 months • Data Analysis of all type 2 diabetic males that had received a total testosterone assessment

  7. Methods • Solstas Lab Database • All patients that had received a total testosterone level assessment over a 13 month period • Utilized a T2DM inclusion / exclusion criteria to determine sample population

  8. Methods • T2DM males assessed for the presence of hypotestosteronism by chart review (Allscripts Database) of a documented total serum testosterone level of less than 300 ng/dL • Excluded if no documentation of prior serum total testosteronism < 300 ng/dL • Determined percentage of T2DM males with a total testosterone level < 300 ng/dL

  9. Inclusion / Exclusion Criteria • Male of any age • Type II Diabetes  A1C > 6.5 or fasting blood glucose > 126 mg/dL • Exclude  No documented A1C or fasting blood glucose level documentation, Hx of Type I Diabetes, chronic steroid use, or Hx of hypopituitarism

  10. Sample Analysis 127 excluded (no gluc/A1c) 38 excluded (DM1, steroids..)

  11. Results • 41/59 (69.5%) have low T with T2DM • 18/59 (31.5%) have normal T with T2DM 4

  12. Demographics Mean patient age 54.5 Mean BMI 33.6 Mean testosterone 207 Mean A1c 7.9 Mean serum glucose 144

  13. Concomitant Conditions Opioid use 39 % (16/41) Hypothyroidism 32 % (13/41) Oral hypoglycemics 73 % (30/41) Insulin therapy 41 % (17/41) CVD/CAD/MI 37 % (15/41) Tobacco smoking 37 % (15/41)

  14. Discussion • Prevalence of T2DM in US high (26 million) and increasing • Increasing incidence of hypotestosteronism ? • No current recommendations regarding screening for low testosterone in males • Low testosterone associated with insulin resistance and T2DM independent of age, race, BMI 4

  15. Discussion • Testosterone supplementation therapy shown in multiple studies to improve: • insulin resistance/utilization • Hemoglobin A1c • serum glucose • DBP • Total, HDL, & LDL cholesterol • increase lean body mass, decrease fat mass, waist circumference 4

  16. Low Testosterone & Cardiovascular Disease • Multiple, conflicting studies… the good: • Several studies show an inverse relationship between cardiovascular disease and testosterone level • T2DM patients with high-normal testosterone have lower risk (25%) of acute MI vs lowest 25% 4

  17. Low Testosterone & Cardiovascular Disease • Multiple, conflicting studies… the bad: • Some studies report an increased risk of non-fatal MI in middle-age and elderly patients with pre-existing heart disease given testosterone replacement • National Institute for Aging study • Veterans’ studies (JAMA, NEJM): 26% vs 20% risk of veterans for MI, stroke, and/or death 4

  18. Testosterone Therapy Risks • Increased PSA.. worsening BPH • Hematopoiesis  hyperviscocity • Gynecomastia • Worsening male breast CA ? • OSA/insomnia • Decreased spermatogenesis • Increased or decreased heart disease? 4

  19. Testosterone Therapy and Prostate Cancer • No evidence between exogenous testosterone and increase incidence or progression of prostate CA • Current evidence based largely on Huggins & Hodges study (1941). Several studies since 1941 have refuted that evidence… however ??? 4

  20. Final Discussion • Higher prevalence of hypotestosteronism in SWVA T2DM patients vs. nationally? • Should we screen? • Should we recommend therapy? 4

More Related