Long-Awaited Study Finds Testosterone Gel Has Modest Results
Some doctors hope the results from the rigorous, government-funded study will curb some of the rampant use of the product. “Frankly,” said Dr. Sundeep Khosla, a dean at the Mayo Clinic College of Medicine, “there is a lot of abuse.”
The New York Times:
Testosterone Gel Has Modest Benefits For Men, Study Says
More than a million men have smeared testosterone gels on their bodies in recent years, hoping it would rejuvenate them, energize them, and increase their libido. But until now, there has never been a rigorous study asking if there were any real benefits to testosterone therapy for healthy men with so-called low T. The first results of such research were published Wednesday in The New England Journal of Medicine. Although it found at best modest benefits, mostly in sexual functioning, it is a landmark study, said Dr. Eric S. Orwoll, a professor of medicine at Oregon Health and Science University, because it provides the first credible data on testosterone’s effects on some of the problems it is thought to resolve. (Kolata, 2/17)
The Associated Press:
Study Finds Testosterone Gel Is No Fountain Of Youth
A landmark study suggests that testosterone treatment is no fountain of youth, finding mostly modest improvement in the sex lives, walking strength and mood of a select group of older men. The researchers emphasized that the findings pertain only to use of testosterone gel by men 65 and older with low hormone levels and related symptoms; whether similar benefits would occur in younger men or with testosterone pills, patches or shots is unknown. (Tanner, 2/17)
NPR:
Study Shows Extra Testosterone Might Help Some Older Men
After a year, [says endocrinologist Dr. Peter Snyder, who led the study] though the benefits were only moderate, it was clear that mood and physical activity had improved among the group that had been getting a boost of testosterone. And the biggest improvement, he says, was in sexual function. "Testosterone improved sexual activity, sexual desire and improved erectile function," Snyder says. (Neighmond, 2/17)