Hypothalamic Response to Kisspeptin-54 and Pituitary Response to Gonadotropin-Releasing Hormone Are Preserved in Healthy Older Men.
Abbara. Ali A; Narayanaswamy. Shakunthala S; Izzi-Engbeaya. Chioma C; Comninos. Alexander N AN; Clarke. Sophie A SA; Malik. Zainab Z; Papadopoulou. Deborah D; Clobentz. Ailish A; Sarang. Zubair Z; Bassett. Paul P; Jayasena. Channa N CN; Dhillo. Waljit S WS
Key Findings
- Older men retain a normal hypothalamic response to kisspeptin-54, showing strong LH release.
- Pituitary response to GnRH is also preserved, with an even higher FSH response in older men.
- Testicular testosterone production in response to kisspeptin-54 is reduced in older men compared to younger men.
Practical Outcomes
- Kisspeptin-54 can be used as a diagnostic tool to check if low testosterone in older men is due to hypothalamic/pituitary issues rather than testicular failure. However, using kisspeptin alone is unlikely to meaningfully raise testosterone levels in this age group, so it shouldn’t be relied on as a primary anti‑aging or performance‑enhancing supplement.
Summary
In healthy older men (around 60 years old), the brain’s kisspeptin system and the pituitary’s response to GnRH still work well, but the testes don’t make as much testosterone in response. Giving kisspeptin-54 boosts LH (a hormone that tells the testes to produce testosterone) even more than in younger men, yet the actual rise in testosterone is blunted.
Abstract
Male testosterone levels decline by 1% per year from the age of 40 years. Whilst a primary testicular deficit occurs, hypothalamic or pituitary dysregulation may also coexist. This study aimed to compare the hypothalamic response to kisspeptin-54 and the pituitary response to gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) of older men with those of young men. Following 1 h of baseline sampling, healthy older men (n = 5, mean age 59.3 ± 2.9 years) received a 3-h intravenous infusion of either vehicle, kisspeptin-54 0.1, 0.3, or 1.0 nmol/kg/h or GnRH 0.1 nmol/kg/h, on five different study days. Serum gonadotropins and total testosterone were measured every 10 min and compared to those of young men (n = 5/group) (mean age 28.9 ± 2.0 years) with a similar body mass index (24 kg/m2) who underwent the same protocol. Kisspeptin-54 and GnRH significantly stimulated serum gonadotropin release in older men compared to vehicle (p < 0.001 for all groups). Gonadotropin response to kisspeptin-54 was at least preserved in older men when compared to young men. At the highest dose of kisspeptin-54 (1.0 nmol/kg/h), a significantly greater luteinising hormone (LH) (p = 0.003) response was observed in older men. The follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) response to GnRH was increased in older men (p = 0.002), but the LH response was similar (p = 0.38). Serum testosterone rises following all doses of kisspeptin-54 (p ≤ 0.009) were reduced in older men. Our data suggest that healthy older men without late-onset hypo-gonadism (LOH) have preserved hypothalamic response to kisspeptin-54 and pituitary response to GnRH, but impaired testicular response. Further work is required to investigate the use of kisspeptin-54 to identify hypothalamic deficits in men with LOH.
Study Information
pubmed
2018
2018-03-15T00:00:00.000Z
10.1159/000488452
13
38