Recently, the cohort of men from the European Male Ageing Study has been stratified into different categories distinguishing primary, secondary and compensated hypogonadism. A similar classification has not yet been applied to the infertile population. We performed a cross-sectional study enrolling 786 consecutive Caucasian-European infertile men segregated into eugonadal [normal serum total testosterone (≥3.03 ng/mL) and normal luteinizing hormone (≤9.4 mU/mL)], secondary (low total testosterone, low/normal luteinizing hormone), primary (low total testosterone, elevated luteinizing hormone) and compensated hypogonadism (normal total testosterone; elevated luteinizing hormone). In this cross-sectional study, logistic regression models tested the association between semen parameters, clinical characteristics and the defined gonadal status. Eugonadism, secondary, primary and compensated hypogonadism were found in 80, 15, 2, and 3% of men respectively. Secondary hypogonadal men were at highest risk for obesity [OR (95% CI): 3.48 (1.98–6.01)]. Primary hypogonadal men were those at highest risk for azoospermia [24.54 (6.39–161.39)] and testicular volume <15 mL [12.80 (3.40–83.26)]. Compensated had a similar profile to primary hypogonadal men, while their risk of azoospermia [5.31 (2.25–13.10)] and small testicular volume [8.04 (3.17–24.66)] was lower. The risk of small testicular volume [1.52 (1.01–2.33)] and azoospermia [1.76 (1.09–2.82)] was increased, although in a milder fashion, in secondary hypogonadal men as well. Overall, primary and compensated hypogonadism depicted the worst clinical picture in terms of impaired fertility. Although not specifically designed for infertile men, European Male Ageing Study categories might serve as a clinical stratification tool even in this setting.

Primary, secondary and compensated hypogonadism : a novel risk stratification for infertile men / E. Ventimiglia, S. Ippolito, P. Capogrosso, F. Pederzoli, W. Cazzaniga, L. Boeri, I. Cavarretta, M. Alfano, P. Vigano, F. Montorsi, A. Salonia. - In: ANDROLOGY. - ISSN 2047-2919. - 5:3(2017 May), pp. 505-510. [10.1111/andr.12335]

Primary, secondary and compensated hypogonadism : a novel risk stratification for infertile men

L. Boeri;
2017

Abstract

Recently, the cohort of men from the European Male Ageing Study has been stratified into different categories distinguishing primary, secondary and compensated hypogonadism. A similar classification has not yet been applied to the infertile population. We performed a cross-sectional study enrolling 786 consecutive Caucasian-European infertile men segregated into eugonadal [normal serum total testosterone (≥3.03 ng/mL) and normal luteinizing hormone (≤9.4 mU/mL)], secondary (low total testosterone, low/normal luteinizing hormone), primary (low total testosterone, elevated luteinizing hormone) and compensated hypogonadism (normal total testosterone; elevated luteinizing hormone). In this cross-sectional study, logistic regression models tested the association between semen parameters, clinical characteristics and the defined gonadal status. Eugonadism, secondary, primary and compensated hypogonadism were found in 80, 15, 2, and 3% of men respectively. Secondary hypogonadal men were at highest risk for obesity [OR (95% CI): 3.48 (1.98–6.01)]. Primary hypogonadal men were those at highest risk for azoospermia [24.54 (6.39–161.39)] and testicular volume <15 mL [12.80 (3.40–83.26)]. Compensated had a similar profile to primary hypogonadal men, while their risk of azoospermia [5.31 (2.25–13.10)] and small testicular volume [8.04 (3.17–24.66)] was lower. The risk of small testicular volume [1.52 (1.01–2.33)] and azoospermia [1.76 (1.09–2.82)] was increased, although in a milder fashion, in secondary hypogonadal men as well. Overall, primary and compensated hypogonadism depicted the worst clinical picture in terms of impaired fertility. Although not specifically designed for infertile men, European Male Ageing Study categories might serve as a clinical stratification tool even in this setting.
No
English
azoospermia; gonadal status; hypogonadism; male infertility; Adult; Aged; Cross-Sectional Studies; Eunuchism; Humans; Incidence; Infertility, Male; Male; Middle Aged; Risk Factors
Settore MED/24 - Urologia
Articolo
Sì, ma tipo non specificato
Pubblicazione scientifica
mag-2017
Wiley
5
3
505
510
6
Pubblicato
Periodico con rilevanza internazionale
scopus
Aderisco
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Primary, secondary and compensated hypogonadism : a novel risk stratification for infertile men / E. Ventimiglia, S. Ippolito, P. Capogrosso, F. Pederzoli, W. Cazzaniga, L. Boeri, I. Cavarretta, M. Alfano, P. Vigano, F. Montorsi, A. Salonia. - In: ANDROLOGY. - ISSN 2047-2919. - 5:3(2017 May), pp. 505-510. [10.1111/andr.12335]
open
Prodotti della ricerca::01 - Articolo su periodico
11
262
Article (author)
no
E. Ventimiglia, S. Ippolito, P. Capogrosso, F. Pederzoli, W. Cazzaniga, L. Boeri, I. Cavarretta, M. Alfano, P. Vigano, F. Montorsi, A. Salonia
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/765205
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