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Depression in Nonclassical Hypogonadism in Young Men

Abstract

The specific objective of this study was to test the clinically derived hypothesis associating a high prevalence of depression in young men with nonclassical hypogonadism. We studied the entire population of men aged 18 to 40 years who had an outpatient visit at an academic health system in the years 2013 to 2015. The study group comprised 186 patients with a diagnosis of eugonadotropic hypogonadism and a testosterone value below 10.4 nmol/L with no apparent cause. We compared their demographic factors, other diagnoses, and treatments with those of (i) the entire population, (ii) a matched population of 930 controls, and (iii) 404 controls with normal testosterone determinations, and no hypogonadism diagnosis. Depression, defined as either an International Classification of Diseases, Ninth Revision (ICD-9) diagnosis or treatment with an antidepressant medication, was found in 22.6% of cases vs 6.6% of population controls [P < 0.001; OR: 1.13 (1.09 to 1.17); 95% CI]. Obesity was also higher in the cases (P < 0.001). The matched controls had a depression rate of 13.4% compared with the case rate of 22.6% [P < 0.002; OR 1.14 (1.08 to 1.17)]. Controls with normal testosterone determinations had a depression rate of 16.8% [P = 0.121; OR: 1.04 (0.96 to 1.12)], suggesting that clinicians may have ordered a testosterone determination because of symptoms consistent with both depression and hypogonadism. The high incidence of depression in nonclassical hypogonadism in young men, although only associative, supports a depression evaluation and treatment as appropriate as well as investigation of the proximate causes of this form of hypogonadism.

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