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Systematic review and meta-analyses on associations of endogenous testosterone concentration with health outcomes in community-dwelling men

Systematic review and meta-analyses on associations of endogenous testosterone concentration with health outcomes in community-dwelling men

Systematic review and meta-analyses on associations of endogenous testosterone concentration with health outcomes in community-dwelling men


  1. http://orcid.org/0000-0002-8805-8498Ross James Marriott1,
  2. Janis Harse1,
  3. http://orcid.org/0000-0002-8856-6046Kevin Murray1,
  4. Bu Beng Yeap2,3
  1. 1School of Population and Global Health, The University of Western Australia, Perth, Western Australia, Australia
  2. 2Medical School, The University of Western Australia, Perth, Western Australia, Australia
  3. 3Department of Endocrinology and Diabetes, Fiona Stanley Hospital, Perth, Western Australia, Australia
  1. Correspondence to Dr Ross James Marriott; ross.marriott{at}uwa.edu.au

Abstract

Objectives The overall study aim is to clarify the relation of endogenous sex hormones with major health outcomes in men. This paper reports a systematic review focusing on published estimates for testosterone associations.

Setting Community-dwelling men.

Participants 20 180 adult men participated in the final set of studies identified and selected from a systematic review. Eligible studies included prospective cohort studies with plasma or serum testosterone concentrations measured for adult men using mass spectrometry with at least 5 years of follow-up data and one of the specified outcome measures recorded. Only published or grey literature items written in English were considered.

Primary and secondary outcome measures Planned prospective outcome measures: cardiovascular disease (CVD) events, CVD deaths, all-cause mortality, cancer deaths, cancer diagnoses, cognitive decline, dementia. Meta-analyses were of the most frequently reported outcomes in selected studies: CVD deaths and all-cause mortality. Succinct characterisations of testosterone associations with other outcomes are also presented.

Results Screening of 1994 deduplicated items identified 9 suitable studies, with an additional 2 identified by colleagues (11 in total). Summary estimates of mean testosterone concentration and age at recruitment for 20 180 adult men were 15.4±0.7 nmol/L and 64.9±3.3 year. Despite considerable variation in mean testosterone, a metaregression estimated no significant dependence on mean age at recruitment among studies (slope=−0.03, 95% CI −0.11 to 0.06). Meta-analyses demonstrated negligible heterogeneity and no significant effect of a 5 nmol/L increase in testosterone on the risk of all-cause mortality (HR=0.96, 95% CI 0.89 to 1.03) or death from CVD (HR=0.95, 95% CI 0.83 to 1.08).

Conclusions Analyses of published estimates did not demonstrate associations of endogenous testosterone with CVD deaths or with all-cause mortality. Suggested further research includes the planned individual participant data meta-analyses for selected studies, enabling the investigation of non-linear summary effects.

PROSPERO registration number PROSPERO: CRD42019139668.

  • epidemiology
  • sex steroids & HRT
  • statistics & research methods

Data availability statement

No data are available.

http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/

This is an open access article distributed in accordance with the Creative Commons Attribution Non Commercial (CC BY-NC 4.0) license, which permits others to distribute, remix, adapt, build upon this work non-commercially, and license their derivative works on different terms, provided the original work is properly cited, appropriate credit is given, any changes made indicated, and the use is non-commercial. See: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/.

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  • epidemiology
  • sex steroids & HRT
  • statistics & research methods

Strengths and limitations of this study

  • This is the first systematic review on this topic to restrict selections to prospective cohort studies of community-dwelling men with testosterone measured using mass spectrometry: the ‘gold standard’ method.

  • Systematic searches were made of both the published and grey literature using online search tools.

  • Meta-analyses used estimates obtained from studies with at least 5 years of follow-up data and from fitted models which controlled for (at least) the age, smoking status and body mass index or waist circumference of participants.

  • Meta-analyses of published estimates were limited to assuming linear relationships; however, subsequent individual participant-level data meta-analyses planned to arise from this work will look to explore non-linear associations.

  • Analyses are of observational data, and so summary estimates will not fully eliminate the possibility of confounding arising from unadjusted effects.

Introduction

What does a low testosterone level mean for a man’s health? In men, levels of testosterone, the key male sex hormone (androgen), decline with increasing age, yet the basis for and health consequences of this phenomenon remain unclear.1–5 Endogenous testosterone concentrations reflect the function of the hypothalamic-pituitary-testicular axis, and are relatively lower in men who are obese, or with metabolic syndrome or diabetes.6–8 Others have reported associations of lower endogenous testosterone concentrations with higher risk of incident diseases, such as cardiovascular disease (CVD), and death.9–16 Whether low testosterone concentrations might contribute directly to the risk of CVD or death or whether it may be associated indirectly through its relationship with ageing and obesity is unknown.17 And whether or not it is directly related, it is possible that endogenous testosterone could be useful as a biomarker for diagnostic and/or prognostic healthcare applications in men.18–20 An improved understanding of the associations of testosterone to health outcomes could inform further exploration and development of this concept.

The Androgens In Men Study seeks to clarify the associations of androgens (primarily testosterone) with key health outcomes in men (mortality, CVD, cancer, cognitive decline and dementia) by conducting a systematic review and a series of individual participant data meta-analyses.21 In this paper, we present the systematic review and meta-analyses using published estimates from prospective cohort studies with at least 5 years of follow-up data and testosterone measured using only mass spectrometry, the most reliable method.22

Methods

This systematic review, conducted 14 June—31 December 2019, was of ‘etiology and/or risk type’ studies.23 24 The prespecified purpose of the systematic review was to identify studies with suitable individual participant-level data (IPD) for collaborating with on a series of IPD meta-analyses. The population, exposure, outcomes characteristics included: adult men in the general community; endogenous circulating sex hormone concentration (primarily testosterone); incident CVD, mortality, cancers, cognitive decline, dementia. Subgroup IPD meta-analyses are also planned for heart failure (HF), myocardial infarction (MI), stroke; colorectal cancer, lung cancer, prostate cancer. A protocol was submitted to PROSPERO on 23 July 2019 and registered on 20 November 2019 (registration number CRD42019139668) and a protocol article has been published.21

Literature search and screening

Four online search tools were used to identify available published (Medline, Embase) and grey literature (OpenGrey, Mednar) items (journal articles, reports, theses, webpage articles) reporting on suitable prospective cohort studies (the underlying unique sources of data). Two reviewers (RJM, JH) independently screened the deduplicated items against prespecified criteria using Rayyan.25 To optimise efficiency, title and abstract screenings were initially conducted (step 1), followed by full text screenings of the selected abstracts (step 2). Disagreements were resolved through subsequent discussions between reviewers and agreement quantified using Cohen’s Kappa and percent agreement. Only items reporting on prospective population-based cohort studies of adults (combined sexes or of men alone) with mass spectrometry measurements of testosterone and at least 5 years of subsequent follow-up data on incident CVD events, cancer or dementia diagnoses, cognition assessments, or on all-cause, CVD, or cancer deaths were selected. The Newcastle-Ottawa Quality Assessment Scale for Cohort Studies (NOS) was used to assess quality of the selected items.26

Additional details on the methods and results are provided in online supplemental material, section 1. Specifically, additional details on systematic searches and screening (online supplemental tables 1–4, section 2), supplemental tables (online supplemental material, section 3), including the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses checklist (online supplemental table 5), supplemental figures (online supplemental material, section 4), and references cited (online supplemental material, section 5) have been included.

Meta-analyses of published estimates

Published estimates (author names, publication year, cohort study name, number of participants analysed, model covariates, testosterone statistics (overall and for individual exposure levels), participant age statistics, numbers of outcome events, follow-up time, HRs and 95% CIs of the most fully-adjusted model) were extracted from selected articles by the first author (RJM). For the purpose of these analyses, we present associations for endogenous total testosterone concentrations, comprising the sum of testosterone in the circulation, whether bound to sex hormone-binding globulin or albumin, or unbound. Testosterone statistics were converted into standard units (nmol/L) and values representing categorical ranges were determined following Wang et al.27 If not reported, the numbers of participants and events within categories of testosterone, and the means of participant ages and testosterone concentrations at baseline, were calculated. The numbers of participants within quartile or quintile categories were calculated by dividing the total sample size by four or five. The numbers of events within categories were solved using Newton’s method by applying the algorithm of Greenland and Longnecker.28 Means and SD for testosterone and age were calculated from presented quartile estimates using the Box-Cox method of McGrath et al, which does not make distributional assumptions.29

A random effects metaregression of mean baseline testosterone concentration on the mean participant age at baseline was conducted using published estimates from: (1) only those items identified in systematic searches; and (2) all suitable articles, including those found outside of systematic searches. A t-test of the metaregression slope coefficient’s departure from zero was done after applying the Knapp and Hartung adjustment.

Dose–response random effects meta-analyses (DR-MAs) were conducted to summarise published HR estimates for the associations of baseline testosterone concentrations with incident all-cause deaths and with CVD cause-specific deaths, as these were the most frequently reported outcomes in selected articles. Estimates from an additional article that had not been selected from systematic searches (Yeap et al30) were also used because it reported suitable estimates from one of the selected studies, and had been published within the literature search period. Contour-enhanced funnel plots were inspected for publication bias and patterns in heterogeneity and Cochran Q tests for heterogeneity (I2), as well as regression tests for funnel plot asymmetry,31 were done. Forest plots were constructed to represent single HR estimates for each study, per 5 nmol/L increase in testosterone. For completeness, HR estimates for the other outcomes are represented in a grouped forest plot, and other effect sizes in tables.

The ‘metafor’ package was used for metaregressions, forest plots and funnel plots, the ‘doseresmeta’ package for DR-MAs, and the ‘estmeansd’ package for calculating study means and SD from published quartile statistics in R V.4.0.2.32–35

Patient and public involvement

This work uses existing published data. Patients and public were not involved in the design, conduct, reporting or dissemination plans of the systematic review or meta-analyses.

Results

Literature search and study selection

The literature search returned 2177 items (1738 published and 439 from grey literature), with 1994 items remaining after duplicates had been removed, and after excluding two Mednar items that had insufficient information available to review (figure 1). These included 1764 journal articles, 111 webpage articles, 81 theses and 38 unpublished reports/other documents. Systematic screening of the returned, deduplicated items excluded 1968, classified 5 as ‘Maybe’, and selected 20 as suitable. Most (92.1%) items were excluded from screening titles and abstracts at step 1, with a much smaller percentage (6.6%) excluded from screening the 157 full-text items in step 2. One item could not be screened in step 2 because the full text was not available. Inter-reviewer agreement was a Cohen’s Kappa (or 96.0% agreement) for step 1 and (or 98.1% agreement) for step 2.

Figure 1

Studies returned from systematic review of the published and grey literature. Step 1 involved screening of titles and abstracts only and step 2 the screening of full-text items not excluded at step 1 (see online supplemental tables 2 and 3). ‘Items’ are individual articles or reports, with multiple items returned for some studies (the purpose was to identify studies with suitable individual participant (IPD)-level data). *Mednar items with insufficient information available to review; additional studies identified through known contacts; screening criteria for five items selected as ‘Maybe’ in step 2 were further investigated using information external to systematic searches and screenings, resulting in the identification of one additional study with suitable IPD-level data.

The 20 selected items collectively reported on eight prospective cohort studies: three from Australia (Busselton Health Study BHS,36–38 The Concord Health and Ageing in Men Project CHAMP,9 39 40 The Health In Men Study HIMS)14 41 42; three from Europe (European Male Ageing Study EMAS,11 43 The MrOS Osteoporotic Fractures in Men study in Sweden,10 44 45 Study of Health in Pomerania SHIP)46; and two from the USA (Atherosclerosis Risk in Communities ARIC,47 48 Cardiovascular Health Study CHS).49–51 Two of the five items classified as Maybe reported on the MrOS USA study, which were found, after further investigation, to be suitable for selection.52 53 Two additional studies were identified as suitable based on information external to the systematic searches and screenings: one from Australia (The Men Androgen Inflammation Lifestyle Environment and Stress study MAILES)54; and one from the USA (the Framingham Heart Study FHS).55 This is 11 cohort studies identified, in total. Additional details on returned and screened items, and selected article attributes are provided in Supplementary Material (Supplementary Section 2, online supplemental tables 4, 6 and 7).

Meta-analysis and summary of selected articles

The quality of selected articles ranged from six to nine (out of nine) stars on the NOS. Relatively high scores reflected that all articles: were of population-based studies; accurately measured the exposure (baseline testosterone concentration); included multivariable models adjusting for participant age and other risk factors; had outcomes measured or collected from record linkage, with or without expert adjudication; and had sufficient follow-up, ranging from 5 to 20 years (online supplemental tables 6–8). Relevant outcomes included: all-cause deaths (n=8 articles); CVD deaths (n=7); strokes or cerebrovascular disease (n=6); cognitive function or cognitive decline (n=5); coronary heart disease (n=4); CVD events (n=4); cancer deaths (n=4); cancer diagnoses (n=3); MI (n=2); HF (n=2); and dementia (n=1). However, one of these articles was a cohort profile description that did not report effect size estimates but the availability of all-cause deaths, cause-specific deaths, stroke, cognitive function, CVD, cancer, MI and HF outcome data.43 Two articles reported testosterone not as the exposure but as a covariate in analyses investigating associations with cerebrovascular events and with all-cause, cancer, and CVD deaths.44 45 The supplementary material for one article11 was sought to obtain effect size estimates for cancer deaths but these were not obtained as at the time of writing. All were published between 2010 and 2018, reflecting the relatively recent adoption of mass spectrometry as the ‘gold standard’ for measuring endogenous testosterone levels.22

The mean age of men at baseline ranged from middle-aged (49–54 year: BHS, FHS, MAILES, SHIP)18 36–38 46 56 to elderly (72–77 year: CHAMP, CHS, HIMS, MrOS Sweden, MrOS USA).9 10 39 41 44 45 49 50 53 Across the 11 studies, summary estimates for 20 180 adult males at baseline were 64.9±3.3 year for mean age and 15.4±0.7 nmol/L for mean testosterone. Although there appeared to be a slight declining trend in mean testosterone with mean age among studies (metaregression slope=−0.07, 95% CI −0.21 to 0.07), this estimate was not significantly different from zero (p=0.27; figure 2a). However, the distribution of model residuals demonstrated significant heterogeneity (pet al57 (FHS) and a low mean testosterone estimate (relative to mean age) from Chan et al37 (BHS), as compared with the other studies (online supplemental figure 1). When restricted to systematically selected items (reporting on ARIC, BHS, CHAMP, CHS, EMAS, HIMS, MAILES, MrOS Sweden, SHIP studies), tests of residual heterogeneity were significant (p

Figure 2

Metaregression of mean testosterone on mean age for (A) all 11 cohort studies and (B) 9 studies with articles that were selected by systematic literature searches and screening. The size of plotted points refers are proportional to the inverse of the corresponding SEs (indicative of relative weightings), with lines demonstrating the fitted model and 95% CIs. Plotted estimates are numbered as from the following articles (cohort studies): 1=Srinath et al48 (ARIC); 2=Chan et al37 (BHS); 3=Hsu et al9 (CHAMP); 4=Shores et al50 (CHS); 5=Lee et al43 (EMAS); 6=Chan et al41 (HIMS); 7=Ohlsson et al44 (MrOS Sweden); 8=Kische et al46 (SHIP); 9=Sueoka et al53 (MrOS USA); 10=Pencina et al57 (FHS); 11=Li et al56 (MAILES). *=includes articles from two additional studies (FHS, MAILES) that were not identified from systematic searches but by colleagues.

HRs for all-cause mortality were calculated from values in four of the selected articles (ARIC,48 BHS,37 CHS,51 EMAS11) and from one that was not selected, but had reported on the HIMS study during the literature search period.30 All HRs were adjusted for the age, smoking status, and body mass index (BMI) or waist circumference of participants. A DR-MA estimated a summary HR of 0.96 (95% CI 0.89 to 1.03) per 5 nmol/L increase in testosterone (figure 3). The summary estimate was similar when calculated using an alternative estimate from Yeap et al30 (HR=0.97, 95% CI 0.92 to 1.03). For both analyses, tests for residual heterogeneity (I2=23.6%, p=0.26; I2=0.0%, p=0.76) and funnel plot asymmetry (p=0.09; p=0.39) were non-significant (online supplemental figure 2a). A comparable HR was calculated from a CHAMP study article9 for inclusion in the forest plot but not in the DR-MA, because a corresponding estimate of variance per 5 nmol/L increase in testosterone could not be calculated. An additional funnel plot, which included the HR estimate from this CHAMP article9 (per 1 SD decrease in testosterone, as reported in that article, also demonstrated no significant asymmetry (online supplemental figure 2b). These results demonstrate no overall effect of baseline testosterone concentration on the relative hazard of death from any cause after adjusting for factors including age, smoking status and BMI or waist circumference.

Figure 3

Forest plot of a meta-analysis of published estimates: association of testosterone with all-cause mortality. Plotted values are the estimated HR for death from any cause, as attributed to an increase in endogenous testosterone concentration by 5 nmol/L. The vertical reference line is HR=1. Study-specific estimates are presented for six of the selected studies: BHS (Chan, 2016)37; EMAS (Pye, 2014)11; ARIC (Srinath, 2015)48 ; CHS (Shores, 2014b)51 ; HIMS (Yeap, 2014b)30; CHAMP (Hsu, 2016).9 Summary estimates are colour coded as calculated using either the estimates from Yeap et al30 calculated from the model including SHBG (black) or from the model including LH (grey). *This estimate from Hsu et al9 could not be used to calculate the summary estimate because a variance estimate was not calculable for a 5 nmol/L change in testosterone using the published information.

HRs for death caused by CVD demonstrated similar findings. A DR-MA using estimates from the same five articles estimated a summary HR of 0.95 (95% CI 0.83 to 1.08) per 5 nmol/L increase in testosterone, with no significant residual heterogeneity (I2=28.3%, p=0.23) or funnel plot asymmetry (p=0.20; figure 4; online supplemental figure 2c). Again, all HRs were adjusted for the age, smoking status, and BMI or waist circumference. The DR-MA repeated using an alternative estimate from Chasland et al38 for the BHS gave similar results (summary HR=0.93, 95% CI 0.83 to 1.03; heterogeneity I2=17.5%, p=0.30; funnel plot asymmetry p=0.17; online supplemental figure 2d). These results demonstrate no overall effect of baseline testosterone concentration on the relative hazard of death from CVD after adjusting for factors including age, smoking status, and BMI or waist circumference.

Figure 4

Forest plot of a meta-analysis of published estimates: association of testosterone with mortality caused by cardiovascular disease (CVD). Plotted values are the estimated HR for death from CVD, as attributed to an increase in endogenous testosterone concentration by 5 nmol/L. The vertical reference line is HR=1. Study-specific estimates are presented for six of the selected studies: BHS (Chan, 2016; Chasland, 2017)37 38; EMAS (Pye, 2014)11; ARIC (Srinath, 2015)48; CHS (Shores, 2014b)51; HIMS (Yeap, 2014b)30; CHAMP (Hsu, 2016).9 Summary estimates are colour coded as calculated using either the estimates from Chan et al37 (black) or Chasland et al38 (grey) for the BHS. *This estimate from Hsu et al9 could not be used to calculate the summary estimate because a variance estimate was not calculable for a 5 nmol/L change in testosterone using the published information.

Summary estimates calculated for the combined outcome of incident stroke and cerebrovascular disease (summary HR=0.93, 95% CI 0.83 to 1.03; heterogeneity I2=43.3%, p=0.15) and incident CVD diagnosis (summary HR=0.93, 95% CI 0.84 to 1.03; heterogeneity I2=34.7%, p=0.22) demonstrated no overall effect of testosterone (online supplemental figure 3). Funnel plot asymmetry was not assessed due to the low number of studies (n≤4),58 and 95% CIs could not be calculated for several studies36 37 41 using the published information. Although a summary estimate could not be calculated, the study-specific estimates demonstrated some significant associations with cancer outcomes (online supplemental figure 3, online supplemental table 9). Estimates showed an increased risk of lung cancer for men with higher concentrations,41 an increased risk of death from cancer for men with lower9 or the lowest (

Discussion

The systematic review identified nine studies, and when combined with an additional two identified by colleagues, comprises 11 in total, with data for over 20 000 men from Australia, Europe, USA and the UK. Metaregressions revealed significant heterogeneity in testosterone measurements at baseline, which was not explained by the mean age of participants among studies. However, DR-MA summary estimates demonstrated no significant effects of baseline testosterone on the relative hazard of death from any cause or from CVD, with negligible heterogeneity present. The DR-MAs, which suitably accounted for correlations between estimates for different exposure categories within studies, were of published estimates that had been adjusted for age, smoking status, and BMI or waist circumference. Furthermore, only published estimates from prospective cohort studies of community-dwelling men that had measured testosterone accurately using mass spectrometry and had observed at least 5 years of follow-up data were used. Despite some of these studies having reported an association between testosterone and mortality,9 30 the collective body of evidence demonstrated no overall associations of endogenous testosterone concentration with mortality or CVD mortality.

Previous meta-analyses investigating associations of endogenous testosterone with the health outcomes of interest looked at CVD outcomes,59–61 all-cause mortality59 and prostate cancer.62 Boyle et al62 and Holmegard et al60 both reported negligible heterogeneity in their estimates. Boyle et al found no significant association of a 5 nmol/L increase in testosterone with prostate cancer and Holmegard et al estimated a 43% increase in risk of ischaemic stroke for men with testosterone levels below the 10th percentile, as compared with men in the 11th–90th percentile range, from a meta-analysis of four articles.60 62 Ruige et al estimated an 11% decrease in risk of a CVD event from a SD increase in testosterone, and reported that significant heterogeneity was explained by larger effect sizes estimated for studies that recruited older men and for more recent articles.61 Araujo et al estimated a 35% increase in risk of all-cause mortality and a non-significant effect on CVD mortality from a 2.18 SD decrease in testosterone, although reported significant heterogeneity, and suggested that effects were driven by differences between the cohorts, such as underlying health status.59 Two of these meta-analyses did not restrict selections to prospective cohort studies59 62 and none restricted selections based on testosterone assay method, although Ruige et al61 did find that assay method did not explain heterogeneity in that study.

The presented meta-analyses are the first to restrict selections to items of prospective cohort studies of community-dwelling men with testosterone measured using mass spectrometry, which is widely regarded as the reference method,22 and with at least 5 years of follow-up data. Accordingly, the presented summary estimates could arguably be viewed as the most reliable to date. These restrictions also resulted in the selection of a relatively small number of publications with estimates suitable for use in DR-MAs. Follow-up times for all-cause and CVD mortality ranged from a median of 4.3 years (total=5 years; EMAS)11 to a mean of 14.9 years (total=16 years; BHS).37 The number of incident deaths ranged from 147 (EMAS)40 to 777 (CHS),51 or to 974 with the additional HIMS article30 included. The number of CVD deaths ranged from 29 (ARIC)48 to 264 (CHS),51 or to 325 with the additional HIMS article.30 However, despite these differences, there was negligible heterogeneity in estimates and no significant funnel plot asymmetry detected.

Linear models were fitted because the HR estimates were reported for insufficient numbers of testosterone categories to have fitted non-linear DR-MA models. This was a key limitation of the analyses and likely to have resulted in an oversimplification of true effects. For instance, although the 95% CI for the Pye et al11 study (calculated from HR estimates for quintile categories of testosterone) overlapped one, an alternative set of estimates in that article (which could not be included in the DR-MAs) reported a two-fold increase in the risk of all-cause mortality for men with very low testosterone (11 nmol/L). Pye et al11 postulated that their reported differences in estimates might be reflective of a nonlinear association that emerges only when endogenous testosterone declines into the lower part of the range (et al30 estimated an ‘U’-shaped association between endogenous testosterone and all-cause mortality, as consistent with a lower relative risk of health impacts for adult males with mid-range levels of testosterone. However, Shores et al51 also used non-linear modelling but did not find any significant associations of testosterone with all-cause or CVD mortality. Clearly, the investigation of non-linear associations is required to more comprehensively investigate the associations of testosterone concentrations with health outcomes in men.

In addition to the linearity assumption, there were other methodological limitations. Several articles reported estimated HRs per increase or decrease in SD and it was not possible to use these estimates in DR-MAs. Although it was possible to convert the per SD estimates to a standardised scale (ie, per 5 nmol/L increase), there was no information to determine adjustments to respective estimates of precision. Estimates for those studies could therefore not be included in the calculation of summary estimates and 95% CIs could not be calculated in forest plots. Summary estimates were calculated from a relatively low number (n=3–5) of articles and for most outcomes a summary estimate could not be calculated, which impacts on the generalisability of findings. Furthermore, these analyses were of observational data so summary estimates will not fully eliminate the possibility of confounding arising from unadjusted effects.

The implications of these findings are that associations of endogenous testosterone concentrations with key health outcomes should not be overstated, as they are not readily portrayed by meta-analyses of summary estimates. A more nuanced approach may be required, to capture non-linear or U-shaped associations.11 30 Also, while testosterone concentrations across ages were relatively stable when considering estimates from different cohorts, associations of testosterone with health outcomes may differ with age, for example with all-cause mortality in middle-aged men37 compared with older men.9 30 A deeper understanding of associations of endogenous testosterone concentrations with key health outcomes, would provide a foundation for analyses of the effects of exogenous testosterone, administered via therapeutic or pharmacologic interventions, on men’s health.

IPD meta-analyses that incorporate flexible non-linear modelling techniques will provide improved scope to clarify the nature of such associations. The ability to apply a consistent statistical model to all studies, incorporate a more extended set of covariates than may have been included at the individual study level, and to estimate effects with increased statistical power, should result in more reliable summary estimates with reduced bias. Furthermore, other hitherto unpublished variables may be available for sharing by the collaborating studies to use in IPD meta-analyses, which could be useful for constructing analysis covariates or outcome variables. For instance, articles from the ARIC study that were identified from the systematic review reported on incident CVD event and death outcomes, but documentation on the ARIC study website shows that data on other prospective health outcomes, including cause-specific deaths and dementia diagnoses, are also available on request.63 Although there have been recent advances with non-linear modelling methods for the meta-analyses of published estimates,32 64 sufficient information in the published articles, as is required for implementing these methods, was not available. In future work, estimates from analyses of the IPD-level data will be used to estimate and plot non-linear summary effects, and so will provide further improvements to estimates of associations between androgen levels and health outcomes in men.

Data availability statement

No data are available.

Ethics statements

Patient consent for publication

Not applicable.

Acknowledgments

We thank Terena Solomons for valuable advice and guidance with conducting the literature search and screening steps of the systematic review.

Supplementary materials

  • Supplementary Data

    This web only file has been produced by the BMJ Publishing Group from an electronic
    file supplied by the author(s) and has not been edited for content.

    • Data supplement 1

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