ERYTHROCYTOSIS Clinical Trial
Official title:
H-36371: Finasteride as a Method of Managing Testosterone-Induced Erythrocytosis
Hypogonadism (low testosterone) is becoming an increasingly recognized problem that affects
numerous men in the United States. Symptoms may be always feeling tired, lower sex drive, and
loss of muscle mass. Treatment typically involves testosterone in either injections or a
topical gel form.
However, administration of testosterone is not without side effects of its own. Testosterone
supplementation therapy is known to cause a variety of side effects including high blood
pressure and high lipids (fats) and an increased proportion of red blood cells. Side effects
of increased red blood cells can include an increased risk of developing a blood clot.
The increase in the red blood cells is related to dihydrotestosterone (DHT - a male sex
hormone) activity. It is normal for the testosterone to become DHT. DHT has various effects
on the body including growth of the prostate gland, baldness, and others and DHT levels have
been linked to elevated red blood cell counts in men on testosterone.
Finasteride is an FDA approved medication used in the treatment of benign prostatic
hypertrophy (BPH) in men with enlarged prostate to improve symptoms and to reduce the risk of
the need for surgery. Finasteride may prevent elevations in or reduce elevated red blood cell
levels in men on testosterone.
Hypogonadism is becoming an increasingly recognized clinical syndrome affecting millions of
men in the United States and globally, and is characterized by symptoms including chronic
fatigue, decreased libido and muscle mass, and low serum testosterone level. Treatment of
hypogonadism in men typically involves treatment with exogenous testosterone.
However, exogenous testosterone therapy is not without risks, and can cause numerous side
effects including high blood pressure, hyperlipidemia, and erythrocytosis, or elevated
hematocrit. Adverse effects of erythrocytosis can include an increased risk of developing
thromboembolism, and treatment of erythrocytosis involves therapeutic phlebotomy and
testosterone dose adjustment, which can decrease the symptomatic benefits of testosterone
therapy.
Aghazadeh et al.found that erythrocytosis occurring during testosterone therapy may be
related to dihydrotestosterone (DHT) levels. As part of normal physiology, testosterone is
converted to DHT via 5-alpha reductase (5AR). DHT is associated with various effects on the
body, including stimulation of prostate growth, male pattern baldness, and others. Currently,
finasteride, a 5-alpha reductase inhibitor (5ARI), is available as an FDA-approved drug used
to treat DHT-related prostate growth and to prevent DHT-related baldness.
Given the positive association between DHT and the increased hematocrit seen in men being
treated for hypogonadism with exogenous testosterone, finasteride's effects in preventing the
synthesis of DHT may improve or even prevent erythrocytosis in men on testosterone.
The study will be a prospective randomized controlled trial of patients on injectable
testosterone therapy. Subjects will be evenly distributed between the control and treatment
groups. The treatment groups will receive finasteride and the control groups will not. All
subjects will then be followed with blood tests to determine if there are any changes in
their hematocrit, testosterone, DHT, and other blood test values.
An interim data analysis will be performed after approximately 150 men (75 treatment and 75
control) are accrued into the study and followed for at least 1 year. Rates of hematocrit
elevation and erythrocytosis will be evaluated in finasteride treated and untreated men to
determine whether finasteride is having an impact on erythrocytosis rates and whether any
unanticipated adverse effects are occurring. Secondary outcomes, including effects on
erythropoietin and hepcidin levels, will also be evaluated. Study accrual will continue if
there is evidence that finasteride may decrease the incidence of erythrocytosis. The study
will be stopped if unacceptable adverse events are identified or if there is no evidence
suggesting that finasteride mitigates the risk of erythrocytosis.
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