Division of General Internal Medicine, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York, New York.
NYU Grossman School of Medicine, New York, New York.
JAMA Netw Open. 2024 May 1;7(5):e2411088. doi: 10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2024.11088.
Anabolic androgenic steroids (AAS) are disproportionately used by sexual minority men, with the physical and mental health implications of AAS use incompletely understood.
To understand the reasons for use and health care needs of gay, bisexual, and queer cisgender men using AAS.
DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: This qualitative study was conducted from November 2021 to May 2023 using self-administered questionnaires and semistructured interviews that were transcribed and coded using reflexive thematic analysis. Participants were recruited through convenience and snowball sampling from lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and queer clinical centers in New York, New York, as well as through online platforms. All patients self-identified as cisgender and gay, bisexual, or queer.
History of nonprescribed AAS use for a minimum of 8 consecutive weeks was required.
The primary outcomes were reasons for and health implications of AAS use and interactions with health care practitioners, as determined through interviews. Interview transcripts were collected and analyzed.
Thematic saturation was reached after interviews with 12 male participants (mean [SD] age, 44 [11] years), with the majority of participants identifying as gay (10 participants [83%]), White non-Hispanic (9 participants [75%]), being in their 30s and 40s (9 participants [75%]), holding a bachelor's degree or higher (11 participants [92%]), and having used steroids for a mean (SD) of 7.5 (7.1) years. One participant (8%) self-identified as Black, and 2 (17%) identified as Hispanic. Seven men (58%) met the criteria for muscle dysmorphia on screening. Nine overarching themes were found, including internal and external motivators for initial use, continued use because of effectiveness or fear of losses, intensive personal research, physical and emotional harms experienced from use, using community-based harm reduction techniques, frustration with interactions with the medical community focused on AAS cessation, and concerns around the illegality of AAS.
In this qualitative study, AAS use among cisgender gay, bisexual, and queer men was found to be associated with multifactorial motivators, including a likely AAS use disorder and muscle dysmorphia. Despite all participants experiencing harms from use, men seeking medical help found insufficient support with practitioners insistent on AAS cessation and, thus, developed their own harm reduction techniques. Further research is needed to assess the utility of practitioner education efforts, the safety and efficacy of community-developed harm reduction methods, and the impact of AAS decriminalization on health care outcomes for this patient population.
合成代谢雄激素类固醇(AAS)在性少数群体男性中使用不成比例,而 AAS 使用对身心健康的影响尚未完全了解。
了解使用 AAS 的同性恋、双性恋和酷儿顺性别男性的使用原因和医疗保健需求。
设计、地点和参与者:这是一项定性研究,于 2021 年 11 月至 2023 年 5 月进行,参与者通过便利抽样和滚雪球抽样从纽约的女同性恋、男同性恋、双性恋、跨性别和酷儿临床中心以及在线平台招募。所有患者均自我认同为顺性别男性,同性恋、双性恋或酷儿。
参与者需要至少连续 8 周非处方 AAS 使用史。
主要结果是通过访谈确定的 AAS 使用的原因和健康影响,以及与医疗保健从业者的互动。收集和分析访谈记录。
对 12 名男性参与者(平均[标准差]年龄 44[11]岁)进行访谈后达到主题饱和,大多数参与者自我认同为同性恋(10 名参与者[83%])、白人非西班牙裔(9 名参与者[75%])、年龄在 30 多岁和 40 多岁(9 名参与者[75%])、拥有学士学位或更高学历(11 名参与者[92%]),平均(标准差)使用类固醇 7.5(7.1)年。一名参与者(8%)自我认同为黑人,两名参与者(17%)自我认同为西班牙裔。七名男性(58%)在筛查中符合肌肉变形障碍标准。发现了 9 个总体主题,包括初始使用的内部和外部动机、因有效性或担心失去而继续使用、深入的个人研究、使用带来的身体和情绪伤害、使用基于社区的减少伤害技术、对专注于 AAS 戒断的医疗社区互动感到沮丧,以及对 AAS 非法性的担忧。
在这项定性研究中,发现顺性别同性恋、双性恋和酷儿男性使用 AAS 与多因素动机有关,包括可能的 AAS 使用障碍和肌肉变形障碍。尽管所有参与者都经历了使用带来的伤害,但寻求医疗帮助的男性发现,从业者坚持 AAS 戒断,因此没有得到足够的支持,因此开发了自己的减少伤害技术。需要进一步研究评估从业者教育工作的效用、社区开发的减少伤害方法的安全性和有效性,以及 AAS 非刑事化对该患者群体的医疗保健结果的影响。