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Original article | published - printed

Prospective Inverse Associations of Sex Hormone Concentrations in Men with Biomarkers of Inflammation and Oxidative Stress.


JOURNAL OF ANDROLOGY 2012 ; 33(5): 944 - 950






Bibliometric indicators



Impact Factor = 2.532

DOI = 10.2164/jandrol.111.015065

PubMed-ID = 22207707


Authors

Haring R*, Baumeister S, Völzke H, Dörr M, Kocher T, Nauck M, Wallaschofski H


Abstract

Objective: The suggested associations between sex hormone concentrations and inflammatory biomarkers in men originate from cross-sectional studies and small-scale clinical trials. But prior studies have not addressed longitudinal associations. Methods: Overall, 1,344 men aged 20-79 years from the population-based cohort Study of Health in Pomerania were followed-up for 5.0 (median) years. We used multivariable regression models to analyze cross-sectional and longitudinal associations of serum sex hormone concentrations (total testosterone [TT], sex hormone-binding globulin [SHBG], calculated free testosterone [free T], and dehydroepiandrosterone sulfate [DHEAS]) with biomarkers of inflammation (fibrinogen, high-sensitive C-reactive protein [hsCRP], and white blood cell count [WBC]) and oxidative stress (?-glutamyl transferase [GGT]) using ordinary least square (OLS) regression and Generalized Estimating Equations models, respectively. Results: Cross-sectional models revealed borderline associations of sex hormone concentrations with hsCRP, WBC, and GGT levels that were not retained after multivariable adjustment. Longitudinal multivariable analyses revealed an inverse association between baseline TT, free T, and DHEAS concentrations with change in fibrinogen levels (per SD decrement in TT: 0.25 [95% confidence interval, 0.04-0.45], free T: 0.30 [0.09-0.51], and DHEAS: 0.23 [0.11-0.36]). Furthermore, baseline DHEAS concentrations were inversely associated with change in WBC levels (per SD decrement: 0.53 [0.24-0.82]). Baseline TT, SHBG, free T, and DHEAS concentrations were also inversely associated with change in GGT after multivariable adjustment. Conclusions: The present study is the first to demonstrate prospective inverse associations between sex hormone concentrations and markers of inflammation and oxidative stress in men. Additional studies are warranted to elucidate potential mechanisms underlying the revealed associations.

Published in

JOURNAL OF ANDROLOGY


Year 2012
Impact Factor (2012) 2.532
Volume 33
Issue 5
Pages 944 - 950
Open Access nein
Peer reviewed nein
Article type Original article
Article state published - printed
DOI 10.2164/jandrol.111.015065
PubMed-ID 22207707

Common journal data

Short name: J ANDROL
ISSN: 0196-3635
eISSN:
Country: USA
Language: ENGLISH


Impact factor trend

Year Impact Factor
2008 2.396
2009 2.344
2010 3.141
2011 2.968
2012 2.532
2013 1.694
2014 2.473

Projects

GANI_MED Teilprojekt PB2 4: Kohorte 4 - Komorbiditäten beim Metabolischen Syndrom
GANI_MED Greifswald Approach to Individualized Medicine (Projektverbund)

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