The Effects of Growth Hormone and/or Testosterone in Healthy Elderly Men: A Randomized Controlled Trial

Manthos G. Giannoulis, Peter H. Sonksen, Margot Umpleby, Louise Breen, Claire Pentecost, Martin Whyte, Carolyn V. McMillan, Clare Bradley and Finbarr C. Martin

(2006)

Manthos G. Giannoulis, Peter H. Sonksen, Margot Umpleby, Louise Breen, Claire Pentecost, Martin Whyte, Carolyn V. McMillan, Clare Bradley and Finbarr C. Martin (2006) The Effects of Growth Hormone and/or Testosterone in Healthy Elderly Men: A Randomized Controlled Trial. The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism , 91 (2). pp. 477-484 . ISSN 2005-0957

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Abstract

Context: Declines in GH and testosterone (Te) secretion may contribute to the detrimental aging changes of elderly men.

Objective: To assess the effects of near-physiological GH with/without Te administration on lean body mass, total body fat, midthigh muscle cross-section area, muscle strength, aerobic capacity, condition-specific quality of life (Age-Related Hormone Deficiency-Dependent Quality of Life questionnaire), and generic health status (36-Item Short-Form Health Survey) of older men.

Design, Settings, and Participants: A 6-month, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial was performed on 80 healthy, community-dwelling, older men (age, 65–80 yr).

Interventions: Participants were randomized to receive 1) placebo GH or placebo Te, 2) recombinant human GH (rhGH) and placebo Te (GH), 3) Te and placebo rhGH (Te), or 4) rhGH and Te (GHTe). GH doses were titrated over 8 wk to produce IGF-I levels in the upper half of the age-specific reference range. A fixed dose of Te (5 mg) was given by transdermal patches.

Results: Lean body mass increased with GHTe (P = 0.008) and GH (P = 0.004), compared with placebo. Total body fat decreased with GHTe only (P = 0.02). Midthigh muscle (P = 0.006) and aerobic capacity (P < 0.001) increased only after GHTe. Muscle strength changes were variable; one of six measures significantly increased with GHTe. Significant treatment group by time interactions indicated an improved Age-Related Hormone Deficiency-Dependent Quality of Life questionnaire score (P = 0.007) in the GH and GHTe groups. Bodily pain increased with GH alone, as determined by the Short-Form Health Survey (P = 0.003). There were no major adverse effects.

Conclusion: Coadministration of low dose GH with Te resulted in beneficial changes being observed more often than with either GH or Te alone.

Information about this Version

This is a Published version
This version's date is: 01/02/2006
This item is peer reviewed

Link to this Version

https://repository.royalholloway.ac.uk/items/7e716be3-e03c-253d-8c39-4e9941ecd4a4/1/

Item TypeJournal Article
TitleThe Effects of Growth Hormone and/or Testosterone in Healthy Elderly Men: A Randomized Controlled Trial
AuthorsGiannoulis, Manthos
Sonksen, Peter
Umpleby, Margot
Breen, Louise
Pentecost, Claire
Whyte, Martin
McMillan, Carolyn
Bradley, Clare
Martin, Finbarr
DepartmentsFaculty of Science\Psychology

Identifiers

doi10.1210/jc.2005-0957

Deposited by () on 19-May-2011 in Royal Holloway Research Online.Last modified on 19-May-2011

Notes

(C) The Endocrine Society whose permission to mount this version for private research or study is acknowledged.

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