48 research outputs found
Acyline: the first study in humans of a potent, new gonadotropin-releasing hormone antagonist
Acyline is a novel GnRH antagonist found in animal studies to be a potent
suppressor of circulating gonadotropin and testosterone (T) levels. We
conducted the first study of acyline administration to humans. Eight
healthy, eugonadal young men were administered a series of acyline
injections (0, 2.5, 7.5, 25, and 75 microg/kg), each injection separated
by at least 10 d. Serum FSH, LH, and T levels were measured for 7 d after
injections. Acyline suppressed FSH, LH, and T levels in a dose-dependent
fashion. Maximal suppression occurred after injection of 75 microg/kg
acyline, which suppressed FSH to 46.9 +/- 2.5%, LH to 12.4 +/- 2.2%, and T
to 13.4 +/- 1.4% of baseline levels, maintaining suppression for over 48
h. Serum acyline levels peaked at 1 h at 18.9 +/- 0.9 ng/ml, remained
significantly elevated above background 7 d after injection, and returned
to background levels by 14-17 d after injection. Side-effects at the site
of injection were limited to infrequent blush and pruritus that resolved
within 90 min of injection. Higher doses of acyline might be effective as
depot injections for long-lasting gonadotropin suppression in
hormone-dependent diseases and for use in male hormonal contraception
regimens
A lower dosage levonorgestrel and testosterone combination effectively suppresses spermatogenesis and circulating gonadotropin levels with fewer metabolic effects than higher dosage combinations
Studies using exogenous high-dosage testosterone (T) or a combination
regimen of physiologic T plus high-dosage levonorgestrel (LNG)
administration in normal men have shown that oligoazoospermia (<3
million/mL) or azoospermia can be achieved in the majority of the men.
However, these hormonal regimens have been associated with significant
weight gain and suppression of serum high-density lipoprotein (HDL)
cholesterol levels. We hypothesized that a combination of physiologic
exogenous testosterone and lower dosage LNG would result in uniform severe
oligoazoospermia or azoospermia in normal men but would cause fewer
adverse metabolic side effects. We conducted a randomized,
placebo-controlled, single-blind trial comparing 6 months of T enanthate
(100 mg IM, weekly) plus LNG, 125 microg by mouth, daily (LNG 125; n = 18)
or LNG, 250 microg by mouth, daily (LNG 250; n = 18) and compared these
regimens with our previous study of the same dosage of T enanthate
combined with placebo LNG (LNG 0; n = 18) or with 500 mg of LNG (LNG= 500;
n = 18). All three combination regimens of T enanthate and LNG suppressed
spermatogenesis more rapidly and resulted in significantly more uniform
severe oligoazoospermia (<1 million/mL) than the T-alone regimen. Severe
oligoazoospermia was achieved in 89% of the LNG 125, 89% of the LNG 250,
and 78% of the LNG 500 groups, respectively, versus 56% of the men in LNG
0 (P < 0.05 for the combination groups vs. LNG 0), but there were no
significant differences between the combination regimens (P = NS). All
four groups gained significant weight compared with their baselines,
although the gain tended to be greater as the dosage of LNG increased
(2.0+/-0.9, 2.9+/-1.1, 3.6+/-1.0, and 5.4+/-1.0 kg gained, compared with
baseline in the LNG 0, 125, 250, and 500 groups respectively; P < 0.05
compared with baseline). Serum levels of HDL cholesterol decreased in all
of the groups, but the effect was larger as the dosage of LNG increased
(4+/-4% vs. 13+/-4%, 20+/-3%, and 22+/-4% decrease in HDL levels from
baseline in the LNG 0, LNG 125, LNG 250, and LNG 500 groups respectively;
P = 0.06 for LNG 125 compared with LNG 0, and P < 0.05 for LNG 250 and LNG
500 compared with LNG 0). We conclude that 1) the combination of
physiologic exogenous T enanthate and LNG suppresses spermatogenesis more
effectively than T enanthate alone and that 2) the combination regimen of
T enanthate plus lower dosage LNG suppresses sperm production comparably
to T enanthate plus higher dosage LNG, while causing less weight gain and
HDL cholesterol suppression. A combination regimen of physiologic
testosterone plus a low dosage of levonorgestrel offers great promise as a
safe and effective male contraceptive regimen
Daily testosterone and gonadotropin levels are similar in azoospermic and nonazoospermic normal men administered weekly testosterone: implications for male contraceptive development
Weekly intramuscular administration of testosterone esters such as
testosterone enanthate (TE) suppresses gonadotropins and spermatogenesis
and has been studied as a male contraceptive. For unknown reasons,
however, some men fail to achieve azoospermia with such regimens. We
hypothesized that either 1) daily circulating serum fluoroimmunoreactive
gonadotropins were higher or testosterone levels were lower during the
weekly injection interval, or 2) monthly circulating bioactive
gonadotropin levels were higher in nonazoospermic men. We therefore
analyzed daily testosterone and fluoroimmunoreactive gonadotropin levels
as well as pooled monthly bioactive and fluoroimmunoreactive gonadotropin
levels in normal men receiving chronic TE injections and correlated these
levels with sperm production. After a 3-month control period, 51 normal
men were randomly assigned to receive intramuscular TE at 25 mg (n = 10),
50 mg (n = 9), 100 mg (n = 10), 300 mg (n = 10), or placebo (n = 12)
weekly for 6 months. After 5 months of testosterone administration,
morning testosterone and fluoroimmunoreactive follicle-stimulating hormone
(FSH) and luteinizing hormone (LH) levels were measured daily for a 1-week
period between TE injections. In addition, fluoroimmunoreactive and
bioactive FSH and LH levels were measured in pooled monthly blood samples
drawn just before the next TE injection. In the 100-mg and 300-mg TE
groups, mean monthly fluoroimmunoreactive FSH and LH levels were
suppressed by 86%-97%, bioactive FSH and LH levels by 62%-80%, and roughly
half the subjects became azoospermic. In the 1-week period of month 6,
daily testosterone levels between TE injections were within the normal
range in men receiving placebo, or 25 or 50 mg of weekly TE, but were
significantly elevated in men receiving 100 or 300 mg of weekly TE. At no
point during treatment, however, were there significant differences in
daily testosterone or fluoroimmunoreactive gonadotropin levels, or monthly
bioactive gonadotropin levels between men achieving azoospermia and those
with persistent spermatogenesis. This study, therefore, demonstrates that
neither monthly nor daily differences in serum testosterone, or
fluoroimmunoreactive or bioactive gonadotropins explain why some men fail
to completely suppress their sperm counts to zero with weekly TE
administration. Innate differences in the testicle's ability to maintain
spermatogenesis in a low-gonadotropin environment may explain persistent
spermatogenesis in some men treated with androgen-based contraceptive
regimens