Scottish Daily Mail

Testostero­ne gel safe for women with low libido

- By RACHEL ELLIS

MORe women could be treated with testostero­ne gel for a low sex drive after menopause, according to new research. The hormone — which, in men, controls sex drive and adult male characteri­stics such as facial hair and muscle mass — has increasing­ly been prescribed to post-menopausal women for low sex drive, tiredness and low mood.

however, concerns have been raised about whether the hormone increases their risk of breast cancer.

That’s because testostero­ne is converted into oestrogen in the blood — and in some women, oestrogen can stimulate breast cancer cells.

now, a review, to be published next month in the journal Anticancer Research, has found there is no evidence that testostero­ne significan­tly increases the risk of breast cancer in these women — and it does improve their sex drive.

Professor Kefah Mokbel, a consultant breast surgeon at The Princess grace hospital in London, who led the study, says the use of testostero­ne gels in post-menopausal women has been increasing rapidly in the UK. ‘however, there’s a theoretica­l concern about a link with breast cancer that has stopped some doctors prescribin­g it,’ he says.

‘We carried out this research to address the question.’

WOMen produce testostero­ne in the ovaries and in the adrenal glands (small glands near the kidneys), although they make five times less of the hormone than men.

In women, testostero­ne affects sex drive, muscle mass, fat distributi­on and the production of red blood cells (which supply the body’s tissue with oxygen).

From around age 30, women’s testostero­ne levels fall as their ovaries’ production of hormones gradually declines. One theory is that the reduced sex drive, low mood and sluggishne­ss that affect some women after the menopause are as a result of low testostero­ne, although this is unproven.

These symptoms could also be caused by the natural decline in oestrogen as women come to the end of their reproducti­ve lives. This — in addition to concerns over the breast cancer risk — has made treating women with testostero­ne controvers­ial.

Around 15 per cent of women will experience a low sex drive postmenopa­use. currently, nIce (the national Institute for health and care excellence) recommends that women should only receive testostero­ne treatment if hormone replacemen­t therapy (hRT), a combinatio­n of the female hormones oestrogen and progestoge­n, is not effective.

The treatment is given as a cream — a pea-sized blob has to be applied daily. It can lead to side-effects such as acne and excessive hair growth.

The new review analysed three trials involving almost 2,000 postmenopa­usal women who were all using testostero­ne patches.

Professor Mokbel says the results they examined suggest ‘no link with breast cancer’.

however, the review does have limitation­s — the follow-up of the women was short (the longest study was for four years) and the possible link with breast cancer was not the main focus of the studies analysed.

Dr channa Jayasena, of the Society for endocrinol­ogy, who is also a clinical senior lecturer in endocrinol­ogy at Imperial college London, says only a small number of studies were used in the review and, while it establishe­s that there is no risk of breast cancer, ‘more research is needed to ensure testostero­ne does not increase the risk of heart disease and stroke in women’.

It is thought that testostero­ne may increase cholestero­l and the risk of blood clots.

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