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The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism Vol. 83, No. 3 784-787
Copyright © 1998 by The Endocrine Society


Original Studies

Testolactone-Associated High Androgen Levels, a Pharmacologic Effect or a Laboratory Artifact?1

Elizabeth A. Cummings2, Sonia R. Salisbury, Morris L. Givner and Roger S. Rittmaster

Department of Pediatrics, Division of Endocrinology, IWK Grace Health Centre (E.A.C., S.R.S.); Department of Pathology (M.L.G.); Department of Medicine, Division of Endocrinology (R.S.R.). Dalhousie University, Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada B3J 3G9

Address all correspondence and requests for reprints to: Sonia R. Salisbury, M.D., Department of Pediatrics, IWK Grace Health Centre, 5850 University Avenue, Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada, B3J 3G9.


    Abstract
 Top
 Abstract
 Introduction
 Materials and Methods
 Results
 Discussion
 References
 
Testolactone, an aromatase inhibitor, blocks conversion of androgens to estrogens. In familial male precocious puberty, slowing of pubertal progression and growth velocity occurs with testolactone and spironolactone. Girls with McCune-Albright syndrome, given testolactone, respond similarly. A 2-yr-old female (case 1) on testolactone for non-McCune-Albright gonadotropin independent precocious puberty had marked elevations of androstenedione (18 ng/mL, normal: 0.2–3.1) and testosterone (3.6 ng/mL, normal < 0.2) but no virilization. Investigations were undertaken to determine whether elevations in testosterone and androstenedione were caused by interference in these RIAs. After a single oral dose of testolactone (5 mg/kg in case 1; 4 mg/kg in case 2, a 3-yr-old boy with familial male precocious puberty; 10 mg/kg in a healthy postmenopausal control), serum testosterone and androstenedione were measured serially by RIA for 24 h. Androstenedione went from normal to a mean peak of 45.4 ng/mL at 1–2 h and returned to baseline by 24 h. Testosterone, undetectable at baseline (case 1 and control) or 1.8 ng/mL (case 2) rose to a mean peak of 6.9 ng/mL and returned to baseline by 24 h. Testolactone, in serial dilutions, cross-reacted in the testosterone assay. Testolactone significantly interferes in these serum RIAs, making their use unreliable in follow-up of patients treated with testolactone.


    Introduction
 Top
 Abstract
 Introduction
 Materials and Methods
 Results
 Discussion
 References
 
TESTOLACTONE (17{alpha}-oxa-D-homo-androsta-1, 4-diene- 3, 17-dione), an aromatase inhibitor that blocks conversion of androgens to estrogens, has been used to treat gonadotropin independent precocious puberty in girls with and without features of McCune-Albright syndrome (polyostotic fibrous dysplasia) (1, 2, 3, 4) and boys with familial male precocious puberty (testotoxicosis) (5, 6). In boys, testolactone and spironolactone have been used in combination; however, most of the beneficial effects on growth velocity and bone maturation were seen with testolactone alone, compared with spironolactone alone (5).

We report 2 cases of gonadotropin independent precocious puberty treated with testolactone. During the course of testolactone treatment, a 2-yr-old girl was found to have markedly elevated levels of androstenedione and testosterone but had no evidence of virilization. Subsequently, a 3-yr-old boy treated with testolactone for familial male precocious puberty also had markedly elevated levels of androstenedione and persistently high testosterone. This study was undertaken to determine whether the elevation in androgens was caused by a true pharmacologic aromatase inhibitor effect of testolactone or was caused by interference by testolactone in the androgen assays. Steroid levels were measured after a single oral dose of testolactone in the two patients and a postmenopausal control. Solutions of testolactone were also added to the androgen assays to determine possible interference in the androstenedione and testosterone serum RIAs.


    Materials and Methods
 Top
 Abstract
 Introduction
 Materials and Methods
 Results
 Discussion
 References
 
Case 1

A 1-yr 11-month-old child, with no café-au-lait spots or bony deformity, presented with the sudden onset of bilateral breast development and white vaginal discharge. Her height was on the 50th percentile, her weight was between the 25th and 50th percentiles, and her bone age was normal. Pelvic ultrasound showed a seemingly mature uterus and cysts in the enlarged right ovary. Hormonal investigations included a normal baseline LH at 0.7 IU/L (normal < 1.0) with a flat GnRH stimulation test (peak 0.4 IU/L, after 2 µg/kg GnRH) and a markedly elevated 17ß-estradiol level of 108 pg/mL (normal < 20). A diagnosis of non-McCune Albright gonadotropin independent precocious puberty was made. Androstenedione and testosterone were not measured, but dehydroepiandrosterone sulfate (DHEAS) was normal at 77 ng/mL (normal: 52–722). Over the next 8 months, breast development continued, growth velocity increased to 20 cm/yr (normal: 9 cm/yr), and menses occurred for 13/24 weeks, despite medroxyprogesterone acetate therapy, up to 10 mg tid. Testolactone (20 mg/kg/day, in 4 divided doses) was started, and menses stopped within 1 week. After 3.5 months of testolactone therapy, there was marked regression of pubertal signs and no further vaginal bleeding, and estradiol levels were undetectable. To assess the impact of testolactone as an aromatase inhibitor, androstenedione was measured and discovered to be markedly elevated at 18 ng/mL (normal: 0.2–3.1). Testosterone on the same sample was 3.6 ng/mL (normal < 0.2), but the child had no evidence of virilization. These values were confirmed on repeat testing, 6 weeks later, and the dihydrotestosterone level was also elevated at 3.2 ng/mL (normal < 0.15).

Case 2

This otherwise healthy boy presented at 3.2 yr of age with a history of gradual onset of pubertal changes, including a deep voice, a mature phallus with 5-mL testes (normal < 4 mL) bilaterally, and Tanner stage III pubic hair. His height was above the 97th percentile (giving a height age of 5 yr), and his bone age was advanced (at 7.5 yr). Family history was remarkable for precocious puberty in 7 males in 4 generations of the extended family. Baseline investigations showed a high serum testosterone of 2.3 ng/mL (normal < 0.2), a normal prepubertal DHEAS (at 144 ng/mL) and a low baseline LH of 0.4 IU/L, with an insignificant stimulation to 1.5 IU/L after GnRH (2 µg/kg); and these were consistent with gonadotropin independent precocious puberty. The patient was treated with testolactone [15 mg/kg/day, and gradually increased to 40 mg/kg·day in combination with spironolactone (2 mg/kg/day]. Spironolactone was stopped after 3 weeks, because of gastrointestinal side effects. On testolactone alone, serum testosterone remained elevated (1.9 ng/mL). Because of noncompliance, pubertal signs continued to progress.

In vivo studies

In the course of investigation of the elevated androgen levels in these patients, the following studies were performed. The effect of a single dose of testolactone on testosterone and androstenedione levels was evaluated in the two patients and in a healthy postmenopausal control subject (estradiol < 20 pg/mL; testosterone < 0.2 ng/mL; androstenedione, 1.3 ng/mL). Informed consent was obtained from the parents and the control subject. Testolactone, provided by Bristol Myers Squibb (Teslac, St. Laurent, QC, Canada), was withheld from cases 1 and 2 for at least 12 h preceding the test. Baseline androstenedione and testosterone were drawn at 0800 h; and the single, usual oral dose of testolactone was given (case 1: 5 mg/kg; case 2: 4 mg/kg; control: 10 mg/kg). With an indwelling iv catheter in place, androstenedione was measured hourly for 12 h and at 24 h, and testosterone was measured every 1–3 h for 12 h and at 24 h. Serum estradiol also was measured hourly in the control subject.

Laboratory studies

Serum concentrations of steroids were determined using kits as follows: androstenedione, Sanofi DSL Coated-Tube RIA, Diagnostic Systems Laboratories Inc. (Webster, TX); testosterone, Medicorp ImmuChem Double Antibody RIA, ICN Biomedicals, Inc. (Costa Mesa, Ca); estradiol, Intermedico DPC Coat-a-Count RIA (Intermedico/DPC, Los Angeles, CA); LH, Chiron Diagnostics Chemiluminescence Immunoassay (Chiron, Walpole, MA); DHEAS, Intermedico DPC Coat-a-count DHEA-SO4 RIA (Intermedico/DPC); and dihydrotestosterone, DSL Coated-Tube RIA, Diagnostic Systems Laboratories, Inc. The lower limit of detection for androstenedione was 0.03 ng/mL, with inter- and intraassay coefficients of variation of 6.0% and 4.3%, respectively; and for the testosterone assay, the detection limit was 0.1 ng/mL, with inter- and intraassay coefficients of variation of 9.6% and 9.3%, respectively. The sensitivity of the estradiol assay was 20 pg/mL.

To determine the effect of testolactone on the androgen assays, a 50-mg tablet of testolactone was dissolved in 50 mL of 95% ethanol. Ten and 100 µL of this testolactone solution were added to 50 µL of normal serum to give final concentrations of 0.66 and 6.66 mmol, respectively. These are equivalent to 200 µg/mL and 2000 µg/mL, respectively. The control serum and the two spiked serum solutions were assayed for testosterone and androstenedione.

To further define the cross-reactivity between testolactone and testosterone in the testosterone assay, 50 mg testolactone (one tablet) were dissolved in ethanol, and serial dilutions were made to give final dilutions in the testosterone assay of 0.1–10 ng/mL. The samples were then processed identically to the testosterone standard curve.


    Results
 Top
 Abstract
 Introduction
 Materials and Methods
 Results
 Discussion
 References
 
After a single dose of testolactone, androstenedione levels rose to supraphysiologic levels, with a mean peak of 45.4 ng/mL, and fell to baseline within 24 h (Fig. 1AGo). Testosterone levels reached a mean peak of 6.9 ng/mL and returned to baseline within 24 h (Fig. 1BGo). Estradiol levels remained unmeasurable at all sampling points during the 24-h period, in the control subject.



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Figure 1. Serial serum androstenedione (A) and testosterone (B) levels by RIA after a single oral dose of testolactone in case 1 (5 mg/kg), case 2 (4 mg/kg), and a postmenopausal control (10 mg/kg).

 
Testolactone, at concentrations of 200 µg/mL and 2000 µg/mL, was added to normal serum (testosterone concentration, 0.32 ng/mL; androstenedione, 1.3 ng/mL). The testosterone and androstenedione values were markedly elevated at greater than 10 ng/mL. Fig. 2Go demonstrates the nonparallel testosterone and testolactone curves in the testosterone assay, confirming cross-reactivity of testolactone in this system. For example, at a testolactone concentration of 445 ng/mL, a false value of 6.9 ng/mL of testosterone would be measured.



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Figure 2. Testolactone in serial dilutions from 0.1–10 ng/mL cross-reacts in the testosterone assay in a nonparallel fashion.

 

    Discussion
 Top
 Abstract
 Introduction
 Materials and Methods
 Results
 Discussion
 References
 
The results show that testolactone interferes in these RIAs for testosterone and androstenedione. This finding has not, to our knowledge, been previously reported. Because the mechanism of action of testolactone is to inhibit the aromatization of androgens to estrogens, a small increase in the precursors, testosterone and androstenedione, might be expected. The degree of elevation of these steroids in our patients and the lack of a clinical virilizing effect in the girl led to the hypothesis that testolactone was interfering in the androgen assays. Testolactone is a weak androgen with a structure similar to testosterone, and it was originally developed for use in patients with metastatic breast cancer (7). Testolactone also has antiandrogenic properties, and it binds to the androgen receptor in human skin fibroblasts with a relative binding activity close to that of cimetidine (8, 9). The finding that testolactone interferes in these RIAs for testosterone and androstenedione is consistent with the similarity of chemical structure of testolactone to testosterone. In our research assay, using a different testosterone antibody (Endocrine Sciences lot 33 A, batch 1343), no cross-reactivity with testolactone was found. However, testolactone did interfere with a previous Endocrine Sciences testosterone antibody used in our laboratory.

There are two previous studies reporting large elevations in androgens in subjects treated with testolactone. The first reported a 62% increase in 17-ketosteroid excretion, but no virilization, in postmenopausal women treated with 150 mg/day testolactone for metastastic breast cancer (10). In adolescent gynecomastia, treatment with testolactone (450 mg/day) was associated with markedly elevated levels of androstenedione (9.5–21 ng/mL) (11). Testosterone levels in these patients also increased significantly, by approximately 1.5 times the baseline, during testolactone therapy but returned to baseline when testolactone was discontinued. In all of these studies, the androgens were measured by RIA. Interference by testolactone in the assays for testosterone and androstenedione could possibly explain all of these findings.

Other reports of testolactone use in various patient groups were not associated with elevations in androgen levels, aside from small increases that could be consistent with the mechanism of action of testolactone. Significant increases in testosterone and modest, but significant, increases in androstenedione were noted in oligospermic men treated with testolactone (12). However, only slight increases in testosterone, dihydrotestosterone, and androstenedione were measured in eight women with polycystic ovarian disease, given testolactone (500 mg every 6 h). In this study, serum was pooled from samples drawn at 10-min intervals throughout the night and was processed by column chromatography before performance of the RIA (13). These differences in sampling and assay techniques may explain the minimal elevation of androgens found in this study. Judd et al. (14) found only small increases in testosterone, androstenedione, and estradiol (measured by RIA) in postmenopausal women taking testolactone for metastatic breast cancer; however, it is unclear when the blood samples were drawn, in relation to the testolactone dose. They concluded that the changes in testosterone and androstenedione were caused by the mechanism of action of testolactone, whereas the estradiol increase was caused by testolactone cross-reactivity in the estradiol assay. No studies of cross-reactivity of testolactone in the testosterone and androstenedione assays were reported (14). In the present study, there was no increase in estradiol associated with testolactone. Two studies of testolactone use in boys with gonadotropin independent precocious puberty did not report further elevations in testosterone above baseline (5, 6). A recent report of testolactone use in patients with congenital adrenal hyperplasia did not report elevated androgen levels in those patients taking testolactone; however, blood samples were drawn before administration of the morning medications (15).

Testosterone and androstenedione levels, measured by RIA, in patients on testolactone therapy do not represent the true serum values; however, androgens measured in other assay systems may not be subject to the same cross-reactivity as found in these RIAs. The choice of antibody will dictate the degree of cross-reactivity. When testolactone was stopped for 24 h before testing, androgen levels in these patients returned to baseline. In girls, serum estradiol levels seem to reflect endogenous levels, as there is no assay interference. In conclusion, because of interference in these androgen RIAs, response to testolactone in boys must be judged on clinical grounds, and elevations of androgens, in the absence of virilization in girls, must be ignored.


    Footnotes
 
1 This work was presented in part at the 10th International Congress of Endocrinology, San Francisco, CA, 1996. Back

2 Recipient of an Eli Lilly Canada Pediatric Endocrinology Fellowship. Back

Received July 23, 1997.

Revised November 24, 1997.

Accepted December 1, 1997.


    References
 Top
 Abstract
 Introduction
 Materials and Methods
 Results
 Discussion
 References
 

  1. Foster CM, Pescovitz OH, Comite F, et al. 1985 Testolactone treatment of precocious puberty in McCune-Albright syndrome. Acta Endocrinol (Copenh). 109:254–257.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
  2. Feuillan PP, Foster CM, Pescovitz OH, et al. 1986 Treatment of precocious puberty in the McCune-Albright syndrome with the aromatase inhibitor testolactone. N Engl J Med. 315:1115–1119.[Abstract]
  3. Feuillan PP, Jones J, Cutler GB. 1993 Long term testolactone therapy for precocious puberty in girls with the McCune-Albright syndrome. J Clin Endocrinol Metab. 77:647–651.[Abstract]
  4. Feuillan PP, Jones J, Oerter KE, Manasco PK, Cutter GB. 1991 Luteinizing hormone-releasing hormone independent precocious puberty unresponsive to LHRH agonist therapy in two girls lacking features of the McCune-Albright syndrome. J Clin Endocrinol Metab. 73:1370–1373.[Abstract]
  5. Laue L, Kenigsberg D, Pescovitz OH, et al. 1989 Treatment of familial male precocious puberty with spironolactone and testolactone. N Engl J Med. 320:496–502.[Abstract]
  6. Laue L, Jones J, Barnes KM, Cutler GB. 1993 Treatment of familial male precocious puberty with spironolactone, testolactone and deslorelin. J Clin Endocrinol Metab. 76:151–155.[Abstract]
  7. Cocconi G. 1994 First generation aromatase inhibitors - aminoglutethimide and testolactone. Breast Cancer Res Treat. 30:57–80.[CrossRef][Medline]
  8. Vigersky RA, Mozingo D, Eil C, Purohit V, Bruton J. 1982 The antiandrogenic effects of {Delta}1-testolactone(teslac) in vivo in rats and in vitro in human cultured fibroblasts, rat mammary carcinoma cells and rat prostate cytosol. Endocrinology. 110:214–219.[Abstract]
  9. Eil C, Edelson SK. 1984 The use of human skin fibrobasts to obtain potency estimates of drug binding to androgen receptors. J Clin Endocrinol Metab. 59:51–55.[Abstract]
  10. Segaloff A, Weeth JB, Meyer KK, Rongone AL, Cuningham MEG. 1962 Hormonal therapy in cancer of the breast XIX. Effect of oral administration of {Delta}1-testololactone on clinical course and hormonal excretion. Cancer. 15:633–635.[CrossRef]
  11. Zachmann M, Eiholzer U, Muritano M, Werder EA, Manella B. 1986 Treatment of pubertal gynaecomastia with testolactone. Acta Endocrinol (Copenh). [Suppl] 279:218–226.
  12. Vigersky RA, Glass AR. 1981 Effects of {Delta}1-testolactone on the pituitary-testicular axis in oligospermic men. J Clin Endocrinol Metab. 52:897–902.[Abstract]
  13. Dunaif A, Longcope C, Canick J, Badger T, Crowley Jr WF. 1985 The effects of the aromatase inhibitor {Delta}1-testolactone on gonadotropin release and steroid metabolism in polycystic ovarian disease. J Clin Endocrinol Metab. 60:773–780.[Abstract]
  14. Judd HL, Barone RM, Laufer LR, Gambone JC, Monfort SL, Lasley BL. 1982 In vivo effects of {Delta}1-testololactone on peripheral aromatization. Cancer Res. [Suppl]42:3345–3348.
  15. Laue L, Merke DP, Jones JV, Barnes KM, Hill S, Cutler GB. 1996 A preliminary study of flutamide, testolactone, and reduced hydrocortisone dose in the treatment of congenital adrenal hyperplasia. J Clin Endocrinol Metab. 81:3535–3539.[Abstract]



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