Department of Medicine, Surgery and Neuroscience, UOC Endocrinology, University of Siena, Siena, Italy.
Department of Biochemical, Experimental and Clinical Biomedical Sciences "Mario Serio", University of Florence, Florence, Italy.
Obes Surg. 2024 Sep;34(9):3434-3444. doi: 10.1007/s11695-024-07426-8. Epub 2024 Jul 31.
Obesity is an important risk factor for secondary hypogonadism in men. Several studies evaluated the impact of bariatric surgery on gonadal function in men, proving an improvement in testosterone levels, without yet a global consensus on the impact of different surgical approaches. Objectives of the study are: to estimate the prevalence of obesity-associated gonadal dysfunction among men with severe obesity; to evaluate the response to bariatric surgery in terms of resolution of this condition, distinguishing between restrictive and restrictive-malabsorptive surgery.
We conducted a retrospective evaluation of 413 males with severe obesity (BMI 44.7 ± 8.3 kg/m2). A subgroup of them (61.7%) underwent bariatric surgery. Anthropometric assessment (weight, BMI, waist and hip circumference), metabolic (glyco-lipidic asset and urate) and hormonal (morning gonadotropin and total testosterone) assessments were carried out at baseline and 3-6 months post-surgery.
Using a TT threshold of 2.64 ng/ml, 256 out of 413 (62%) patients were categorized as having biochemical hypogonadism. At multivariate analysis, the only parameter significantly associated with biochemical hypogonadism, was BMI value (p = 0.001). At 3-6 months after surgery, during the acute weight loss phase, only 20.1% of patients still had biochemical hypogonadism. At multivariate analysis, which included age, presurgical BMI, pre-surgical TT, surgical approach and %EWL, presurgical TT levels (p = 0.0004), %EWL (p = 0.04), and mixed restrictive-malabsorptive surgery (p = 0.01), were independently associated with the recovery of gonadal function.
The results of this study underscore the potential reversibility of obesity-associated gonadal dysfunction through bariatric surgery, highlighting the importance of considering surgical approach.
肥胖是男性继发性性腺功能减退的重要危险因素。几项研究评估了减重手术对男性性腺功能的影响,证明了睾酮水平的改善,但对于不同手术方法的影响尚未达成共识。本研究的目的是:估计严重肥胖男性中与肥胖相关的性腺功能障碍的患病率;评估减重手术对此类疾病的治疗效果,区分限制型和限制-吸收不良型手术。
我们对 413 名严重肥胖(BMI 44.7±8.3kg/m2)的男性进行了回顾性评估。其中 61.7%的人接受了减重手术。在基线和手术后 3-6 个月进行了人体测量评估(体重、BMI、腰围和臀围)、代谢(糖脂代谢和尿酸)和激素(促性腺激素和总睾酮)评估。
使用 TT 阈值 2.64ng/ml,413 名患者中有 256 名(62%)被归类为生化性腺功能减退症。多变量分析显示,唯一与生化性腺功能减退症显著相关的参数是 BMI 值(p=0.001)。手术后 3-6 个月,在急性体重减轻阶段,只有 20.1%的患者仍存在生化性腺功能减退症。多变量分析纳入了年龄、术前 BMI、术前 TT、手术方式和 EWL%,结果显示术前 TT 水平(p=0.0004)、EWL%(p=0.04)和混合限制-吸收不良型手术(p=0.01)与性腺功能恢复独立相关。
本研究结果强调了减重手术对肥胖相关性腺功能障碍的潜在可逆性,突出了考虑手术方式的重要性。