Ibuprofen alters human testicular physiology to produce a state of compensated hypogonadism

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 115(4), E715-E724

DOI 10.1073/pnas.1715035115 PMID 29311296

Abstract

Concern has been raised over increased male reproductive disorders in the Western world, and the disruption of male endocrinology has been suggested to play a central role. Several studies have shown that mild analgesics exposure during fetal life is associated with antiandrogenic effects and congenital malformations, but the effects on the adult man remain largely unknown. Through a clinical trial with young men exposed to ibuprofen, we show that the analgesic resulted in the clinical condition named "compensated hypogonadism," a condition prevalent among elderly men and associated with reproductive and physical disorders. In the men, luteinizing hormone (LH) and ibuprofen plasma levels were positively correlated, and the testosterone/LH ratio decreased. Using adult testis explants exposed or not exposed to ibuprofen, we demonstrate that the endocrine capabilities from testicular Leydig and Sertoli cells, including testosterone production, were suppressed through transcriptional repression. This effect was also observed in a human steroidogenic cell line. Our data demonstrate that ibuprofen alters the endocrine system via selective transcriptional repression in the human testes, thereby inducing compensated hypogonadism.

Topics

Kristensen Desdoits-Lethimonier ibuprofen human testicular physiology compensated hypogonadism, ibuprofen NSAID anti-androgenic endocrine disruption male reproductive function, Proceedings National Academy Sciences 2018 ibuprofen testicular function men, compensated hypogonadism elevated LH suppressed testosterone ibuprofen 600 mg BID, Leydig cell Sertoli cell ibuprofen direct inhibition testosterone production ex vivo, mild analgesic exposure male endocrinology disruption reproductive disorder Western world, ibuprofen 14-day exposure healthy young men LH/testosterone ratio elevation, anti-inflammatory drug testicular toxicity steroidogenesis inhibition human organ culture, NSAID endocrine disruptor male fertility testosterone AMH inhibin B ibuprofen, in vivo ex vivo testicular organ culture ibuprofen prostaglandin-independent mechanism
PMID 29311296 29311296 DOI 10.1073/pnas.1715035115 10.1073/pnas.1715035115

Cite this article

Kristensen, D. M., Desdoits-Lethimonier, C., Mackey, A. L., Dalgaard, M. D., De Masi, F., Munkbøl, C. H., Styrishave, B., Antignac, J. P., Le Bizec, B., Platel, C., Hay-Schmidt, A., Jensen, T. K., Lesné, L., Mazaud-Guittot, S., Kristiansen, K., Brunak, S., Kjaer, M., Juul, A., & Jégou, B. (2018). Ibuprofen alters human testicular physiology to produce a state of compensated hypogonadism. *Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America*, *115*(4), E715-E724. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1715035115

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