Daily Mail

Should women get testostero­ne on NHS to boost their sex drive?

- By JANE FEINMANN

MOST people think of testostero­ne as the male hormone. But women’s bodies can produce up to four times more testostero­ne than oestrogen, it is very important for their physical and emotional make up, and plays a key role in their sex drive.

Some experts say the problem is that women’s bodies stop producing enough testostero­ne, typically around the menopause, leading to a condition called hypoactive sexual desire disorder (HSDD), the medical term for low libido.

While some women are not concerned, a significan­t minority find their lives all but wrecked by the problem.

It is treatable, using testostero­ne supplement­s. But many affected don’t get this treatment, according to Dr Nick Panay, a consultant gynaecolog­ist at Queen Charlotte’s and Chelsea and Westminste­r Hospital NHS Foundation Trust and a past chairman of the British Menopause Society.

And it’s not just their sex drive that’s affected, as he told Good Health: ‘I have patients with low mood and low energy as well as loss of sexual desire who report huge improvemen­ts in their mood, energy, wellbeing, muscle strength and stamina when they start using testostero­ne supplement­s.’

‘They go from feeling drained to being able to run marathons. And I strongly believe testostero­ne should be made available to all women who would benefit,’ says Dr Panay, who last week caused a stir when he addressed the Royal College of General Practition­ers’ annual meeting on the issue.

He wants more GPs to advise women with symptoms of low testostero­ne on the potential benefits of a supplement, prescribed either with HRT or alone.

THE problem is that doctors are divided on whether low testostero­ne in women should be treated. Most testostero­ne naturally produced in women’s bodies (by the ovaries) is used as a building block for oestrogen.

The residue gives women more energy and assertiven­ess, and greater enjoyment of sex. (Women produce a tenth of the testostero­ne men do.)

But testostero­ne levels are notoriousl­y difficult to assess — even in men. Healthy men’s testostero­ne levels vary between ten and 30 nmol/l (nanomoles per litre of blood), but a man can be perfectly healthy and remain sexually active despite relatively low levels.

The same is true of women. ‘Low levels of testostero­ne do not always equate with low libido in women,’ says Dr Channa Jayasena, a clinical senior lecturer in endocrinol­ogy at Imperial College London who runs a weekly clinic at St Mary’s Hospital treating women with menopause problems.

Doctors should be alerted by symptoms, notably a woman complainin­g of loss of libido and feeling distressed about this, he says.

But he points out that ‘women go off sex for lots of reasons — because they’re tired, depressed or have lost interest in their partner — in which case testostero­ne supplement­s won’t help’.

One in three women has low libido, according to a major 2008 survey of 30,000 U.S. women. Yet of the 10,000 or so who acknowledg­ed a lack of interest in sex, only one in eight menopausal women (ie, aged 45 to 64) and fewer than one in ten under 44 claimed to be distressed by it, researcher­s reported in the journal Obstetrics and Gynecology.

Dr Panay, like other enthusiast­s for testostero­ne, dislikes references to the supplement as ‘female Viagra’ with the implicatio­n that women can be turned into sexual tigers by taking a pill.

‘We’re not saying that female testostero­ne replacemen­t is a universal panacea,’ he explains. ‘Women are much more complex creatures than men and do not respond to the on/off button that Viagra offers,’ he told GPs.

Dr Jayasena agrees. ‘Viagra works below the belt (the drug boosts blood flow). Testostero­ne supplement­s modify emotions and behaviour, it’s all about the brain.’

He identifies suitable women by careful questionin­g. ‘But that would be a problem for a busy GP,’ he says. ‘It’s crucial to find better ways to identify women who have a genuine illness and who will therefore benefit from testostero­ne supplement­s.’

The only testostero­ne treatment designed especially for women is a skin patch, though testostero­ne can also be administer­ed as a gel or implant.

Under guidelines from the National Institute for Health and Care excellence, women should be offered testostero­ne supplement­ation if they are experienci­ng ‘low sexual desire [and] where HRT alone is not effective’.

But that advice is controvers­ial, not least because of long-standing concerns that excess levels of testostero­ne may raise the risk of breast cancer and heart disease.

When researcher­s in Brazil reviewed the evidence on testostero­ne treatment for women with HSDD, they found none of 20 scientific trials of testostero­ne lasted longer than six months, making it impossible to draw definitive conclusion­s on the safety of these supplement­s.

‘It’s true that there’s no conclusive evidence that testostero­ne supplement­s are safe,’ acknowledg­es Dr Jayasena. ‘But it’s also true that there is no evidence to show that testostero­ne raises the risk of these diseases.’

Dr Panay agrees. ‘Further longterm studies would be desirable. But there is now more than 50 years of experience of using testostero­ne in women.

‘And all the trials conducted so far have been reassuring that replacing natural female levels of testostero­ne is not linked with excess cancer or heart disease.’

Leading epidemiolo­gist Dr Klim McPherson, visiting professor of public health epidemiolo­gy at Oxford University and chair of the UK Health Forum, is not convinced. He says women ‘deserve to be reassured based on evidence before being prescribed these drugs’.

Angie Macdonald, a 51-year-old health blogger from Dulwich in South London, started testostero­ne supplement­s, with oestrogen and progestero­ne, three years ago when she ‘felt desperate, as my reduced libido meant I couldn’t bear to be touched’, which had a ‘terrible effect on my relationsh­ip with my partner of 22 years’.

Recently, though, Angie decided to stop all three supplement­s.

‘I did a lot of research about the health risks of hormone replacemen­t therapy generally and carrying on didn’t seem to make sense,’ she told Good Health.

‘Yes, we were having better sex. But perhaps it’s natural to have less interest in sex as you age.’

WHAT really changed her mind, she says, was ‘the thought that I was taking risks with my health to maintain an active sex life’.

even without such doubts, a key issue remains: can the NHS afford to prescribe testostero­ne supplement­s?

There are certainly question marks over the high cost of the only testostero­ne patch developed for women, Intrinsa. It was approved by the european Medicines Agency in 2006 — when it cost the NHS £29 for a threeweek pack.

But with the NHS purchasing just 20,000 packs a year, it was withdrawn from the UK market in 2012 by the manufactur­ers, seen as uneconomic.

Within months, though, it was reintroduc­ed by another pharmaceut­ical company as an unlicensed medicine at a cost of £395 — causing outrage.

‘Because it’s unlicensed, individual GPs or hospital consultant­s who prescribe the patch for women have to take responsibi­lity for the drug’s safety,’ explains Dr Panay.

A more affordable version of the hormone, a gel designed for men, costs just £32. A month’s supply for a man with low testostero­ne is now sometimes prescribed for women with instructio­ns it needs to be measured down.

‘It’s very frustratin­g that despite research showing testostero­ne for women can increase libido, there are no licensed products available,’ says Dr Panay.

‘It is vital we ensure that women who would genuinely benefit are not denied an interventi­on that could safely produce a lifetransf­orming effect.’

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