
Opioid-Induced Hypogonadism: Why and How to Treat It
Author(s) -
Anna Maria Aloisi
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
pain physician
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.31
H-Index - 99
eISSN - 2150-1149
pISSN - 1533-3159
DOI - 10.36076/ppj.2012/15/es111
Subject(s) - medicine , testosterone (patch) , libido , endocrine system , opioid , chronic pain , estrogen , hormone , physiology , bioinformatics , physical therapy , receptor , biology
Background: Gonadal hormones are critical factors in modulating the experience of pain, assuggested by the several sex differences observed: women have a greater risk of many clinicalpain conditions, and postoperative and procedural pain may be more severe in them than in men.A growing body of literature demonstrates the role of estrogen in the female pain experience,whereas less attention has been given to testosterone and its functions.Nevertheless, testosterone has an appreciable role in both women and men: adequate serumlevels are required in males and females for libido and sexuality; cellular growth; maintenance ofmuscle mass and bone; healing; blood-brain barrier; and for central nervous system maintenance.Pain therapy, and particularly opioid therapy, has been shown to affect testosterone plasma levels.Thus, the chronic administration of pain killers, such as opioids, requires the physician to be awareof both the consequences that can develop due to long-term testosterone impairment and theavailable means to restore and maintain physiological testosterone levels.Objective: The objective is to highlight to pain physicians that the endocrine changes occurringduring chronic pain therapy can participate in the body dysfunctions often present in chronic painpatients and that there are possible hormone replacement methods that can be carried out in menand women to improve their quality of life.Study Design: A comprehensive review of the literature.Methods: A comprehensive review of the literature relating to opioid-induced hypogonadism, aswell as other very common forms of hypogonadism, its endocrine effects, and possible therapeuticactions. The literature was collected from electronic and other sources. The reviewed literatureincluded observational studies, case reports, systematic reviews, and guidelines.Outcome Measures: Evaluation of the endocrine changes described in chronic pain therapy wasthe primary outcome measure. The secondary outcome measures were functional improvementand adverse effects of hormone replacement.Results: The results of the survey clearly show that sex hormone determination is very rare inpain centers. Given the complexity and widespread nature of pain therapy, there is a paucity ofqualitative and quantitative literature regarding its endocrine consequences. The available evidenceis weak for pain relief, but is consistent for many collateral effects, possibly deriving from paintherapy, such as fatigue, depression, and neurodegenerative diseases.Limitation: This is a narrative review without application of methodological quality assessmentcriteria. Even so, there is a paucity of literature concerning both controlled and observationalliterature for the endocrine effects of most analgesic drugs.Conclusion: Testosterone replacement suffers from old prejudices about its utility and safety.With this review we illustrate the available therapeutic choices able to maintain T concentrationinto physiological ranges and reduce nociception with a final goal of improving patients’ qualityof life.Key words: Pain, pain therapy, hypogonadism, adverse effects, morphine, HRT, testosterone