Overview

Exercise and Testosterone Therapy in Elderly Men With Physical Frailty

Status:
Completed
Trial end date:
2009-08-01
Target enrollment:
0
Participant gender:
Male
Summary
The primary aim of this study is to determine, in hypogonadal older men with physical frailty, whether exercise training combined with testosterone replacement therapy can improve skeletal muscle strength, and lean mass, to a greater degree than exercise training alone.
Phase:
Phase 3
Accepts Healthy Volunteers?
No
Details
Lead Sponsor:
Washington University School of Medicine
Collaborator:
Solvay Pharmaceuticals
Treatments:
Methyltestosterone
Testosterone
Testosterone 17 beta-cypionate
Testosterone enanthate
Testosterone undecanoate
Criteria
Inclusion Criteria:

- Male, age 65 years and older

- Total serum testosterone level < 350 ng/dl

- Total Modified Physical Performance Test Score <28

Exclusion Criteria:

- Inability to walk 50 feet independently

- Current use of estrogen, progestin, or androgen containing compound

- Diagnosis of dementia of severity sufficient to interfere with informed consent or
compliance with the protocol, or a score of 11 or greater on the Short Blessed Test of
Orientation, Memory and Concentration

- Visual or hearing impairments that interfere with following directions

- Cardiopulmonary disease (recent MI, unstable angina or CHF, etc.), neuromuscular
impairments, or unstable medical condition that would contraindicate progressive
resistance exercise training

- History of prostate cancer or hormone dependent neoplasia

- PSA level > 4 ng/ml

- Serum liver transaminase levels of greater than 2 standard deviations above normal

- Use of drugs for osteoporosis for less than 1 year

- Current participation in a vigorous exercise or weight-training program more than once
per week

- History of sleep apnea requiring use of CPAP

- Uncontrolled thyroid disease

- Diagnosis of cancer within the past 5 years other than superficial skin cancer
(squamous or basal cell)

- hematocrit > 50%

- AUA symptom score > 16.

- History of alcohol or substance abuse

- Presence of severe facial acne

- Active symptoms of depression with GDS score > 5 and symptoms severe enough to cause
>5% weight loss in previous 3 months or interfere with research assessments