Association of bioavailable, free, and total testosterone with insulin resistance: influence of sex hormone-binding globulin and body fat

Diabetes Care, 27(4), 861-868

DOI 10.2337/diacare.27.4.861 PMID 15047639

Abstract

Objective

Previous reports of an association between low testosterone levels and diabetes risk were often confounded by covariation of sex hormone-binding globulin (SHBG) and testosterone measurements. Measurements of bioavailable and free testosterone, more reliable indexes of biologically active testosterone, were examined for their associations with markers of insulin resistance and body fat measures in 221 middle-aged nondiabetic men. RESEARCH DESIGN AND

Methods

Bioavailable and free testosterone were calculated from the concentrations of total testosterone, SHBG, and albumin, and they were not significantly correlated with SHBG (r = 0.07-0.1). In contrast, total testosterone correlated significantly with SHBG (r = 0.63). We evaluated the relationship between these measures of circulating testosterone and markers for insulin resistance (i.e., fasting insulin, C-peptide, and homeostasis model assessment for insulin resistance [HOMA-IR]) as well as total body fat (assessed by dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry [DEXA]) and abdominal fat distribution (assessed by single-slice computed tomography [CT]).

Results

Bioavailable, free, and total testosterone and SHBG all correlated significantly with fasting insulin (age-adjusted r = -0.15 [P = 0.03], -0.14 [P = 0.03], -0.32 [P < 0.0001], and -0.38 [P < 0.0001], respectively), fasting C-peptide (r = -0.18 [P = 0.009] to -0.41 [P < 0.0001]), HOMA-IR (r = -0.15 [P = 0.03] to - 0.39 [P < 0.0001]), and body fat measures (r = -0.17 [P = 0.008] to -0.44 [P < 0.0001]). Only SHBG and total testosterone were significantly associated with fasting glucose (r = -0.20 [P = 0.003] to -0.21 [P = 0.002]). In multivariate analysis, bioavailable or free testosterone was significantly and inversely associated with insulin, C-peptide, and HOMA-IR, but this was not independent of total body or abdominal fat. SHBG was a significant determinant of insulin, C-peptide, and HOMA-IR, independent of body fat. The associations between total testosterone and insulin resistance were confounded by SHBG.

Conclusions

The inverse association between testosterone and insulin resistance, independent of SHBG, was mediated through body fat.

Topics

testosterone insulin resistance SHBG body fat men, bioavailable free testosterone diabetes risk male, sex hormone binding globulin insulin resistance association, Tsai testosterone SHBG insulin resistance body fat, low testosterone metabolic syndrome nondiabetic men, free testosterone HOMA-IR abdominal fat distribution, testosterone body composition DEXA CT abdominal fat, male hypogonadism insulin resistance confounding SHBG, bioavailable testosterone fasting insulin C-peptide association, androgen deficiency metabolic risk factors middle-aged men
PMID 15047639 15047639 DOI 10.2337/diacare.27.4.861 10.2337/diacare.27.4.861

Cite this article

Tsai, E., Matsumoto, A., Fujimoto, W., & Boyko, E. (2004). Association of bioavailable, free, and total testosterone with insulin resistance: influence of sex hormone-binding globulin and body fat. *Diabetes care*, *27*(4), 861-868. https://doi.org/10.2337/diacare.27.4.861

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