CLINICAL PHARMACOLOGY
Endogenous androgens are
responsible for the normal growth and development of the male sex organs and
for maintenance of secondary sex characteristics. These effects include growth
and maturation of prostate, seminal vesicles, penis, and scrotum; development
of male hair distribution, such as beard, pubic, chest, and axillary hair;
laryngeal enlargement; vocal chord thickening; alterations in body musculature;
and fat distribution.
Androgens also cause retention
of nitrogen, sodium, potassium, and phosphorus, and decreased urinary excretion
of calcium. Androgens have been reported to increase protein anabolism and
decrease protein catabolism. Nitrogen balance is improved only when there is
sufficient intake of calories and protein.
Androgens are responsible for
the growth spurt of adolescence and for the eventual termination of linear
growth which is brought about by fusion of the epiphyseal growth centers. In
children, exogenous androgens accelerate linear growth rates but may cause a
disproportionate advancement in bone maturation. Use over long periods may
result in fusion of the epiphyseal growth centers and termination of the
growth process. Androgens have been reported to stimulate the production of red
blood cells by enhancing the production of erythropoietic stimulating factor.
During exogenous administration of androgens, endogenous
testosterone release is inhibited through feedback inhibition of pituitary
luteinizing hormone (LH). At large doses of exogenous androgens,
spermatogenesis may also be suppressed through feedback inhibition of pituitary
follicle stimulating hormone (FSH).
There is a lack of substantial evidence that androgens
are effective in fractures, surgery, convalescence, and functional uterine
bleeding.
Pharmacokinetics
Testosterone esters are less polar than free
testosterone. Testosterone esters in oil injected intramuscularly are absorbed
slowly from the lipid phase; thus testosterone enanthate can be given at
intervals of two to four weeks.
Testosterone in plasma is 98 percent bound to a specific
testosterone-estradiol binding globulin, and about two percent is free. Generally,
the amount of this sex-hormone binding globulin (SHBG) in the plasma will
determine the distribution of testosterone between free and bound forms, and
the free testosterone concentration will determine its half-life.
About 90 percent of a dose of testosterone is excreted in
the urine as glucuronic and sulfuric acid conjugates of testosterone and its
metabolites; about six percent of a dose is excreted in the feces, mostly in
the unconjugated form. Inactivation of testosterone occurs primarily in the liver.
Testosterone is metabolized to various 17-keto steroids through two different
pathways. There are considerable variations of the half-life of testosterone as
reported in the literature, ranging from 10 to 100 minutes.
In responsive tissues, the activity of testosterone
appears to depend on reduction to dihydrotestosterone (DHT), which binds to
cytosol receptor proteins. The steroid-receptor complex is transported to the
nucleus where it initiates transcription events and cellular changes related to
androgen action.