The Dr Louise Newson Podcast - 275 - Testosterone and the hormone triangle, with Dr Mohit Khera

Episode Date: September 24, 2024

On this week’s podcast, Dr Louise is joined by Dr Mohit Khera, a US-based leading urology specialist treating urinary tract disorders, male infertility, and male and female sexual dysfunction. Th...ey discuss the role of testosterone, the most biologically active hormone in the female body, why he believes testosterone is the best barometer of health of all hormones, and testosterone replacement. For more information about Dr Mohit, click here, and you can follow him on Instagram @ drmohitkhera. For more information on Newson Health, click here. Dr Louise Newson’s first-ever live theatre tour, Hormones and Menopause – The Great Debate, takes place 27 September to 12 November. For more information and tickets, click here.

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 Hello, I'm Dr Louise Newsome. I'm a GP and menopause specialist and I'm also the founder of the Neuson Health Menopause and Well-Being Centre here in Stratford-Pon-Avon. I'm also the founder of the free balance app. Each week on my podcast, join me and my special guests where we discuss all things perimenopause and menopause. We talk about the latest research, bust myths on menopause symptoms and treatments, and often share moving and always inspirational personal stories. This podcast is brought to you by the Newsome Health Group, which has clinics across the UK dedicated to providing individualised perimenopause and menopause care for all women. So I'm very excited on the podcast today because I have someone here with me remotely, because he's in America, Moe Kiro, who's a professor of urology and I have been reading his work, I've been watching his work, I've had him in High Magar. But also many of you know, my husband's a urologist. And so he's feeling quite left out that he is not here in this podcast
Starting point is 00:01:12 because him and Mo have even danced together at conferences. They enjoy each other's company. So it's another connection and I love connections. So welcome, Mo. Today we're going to be talking about testosterone. So thank you so much for agreeing to come to the podcast. Thank you so much for having me on the show, Louise. So we've been talking a lot before we started
Starting point is 00:01:34 and I could talk to you all day and all night because your knowledge is incredible. But I wanted to just talk really basically about testosterone. But before I start, could I just ask you, why urology? Why did you get into doing urology? It's probably the most amazing field in medicine. You know, urologists have the ability to be surgeon, so we get to operate. We also get to make the diagnosis, so we get to do both sides. If you think about it, the population's aging.
Starting point is 00:02:00 So more and more people will need a urologist. By the year 2050, 20% of the population globally will be over the age of 80. So think about that. And I think the best field in urology really is sexual medicine and infertility. It's what I specialize in. It's really been a passion of mine. And Paul would also add that urologists are the nicest people. Would you agree with that?
Starting point is 00:02:22 100%. And I actually agree. So I had the pleasure last year of lecturing for the British Association of Urological Surgeons, spouse. Paul was in the audience, my husband. But actually in the coffee breaks, in the lunch break, everyone's really friendly. They're chatting, they're laughing, they're shaking hands, they're sharing anecdotes. There's no competitiveness. Whereas I've lectured at lots of other healthcare professionals meetings and conferences where people are a bit guarded. They're almost trying to protect whether it's their own clinical practice or just their own way.
Starting point is 00:03:02 that they are, I don't know, but something about urologists is that they're very different. I don't know if that's the same in America. I may be biased, but I completely agree with you. Which is great because we all learn from each other every single day. I keep saying to my children, every day is a learning day. There's so much, and medicine doesn't stop.
Starting point is 00:03:23 I wish I could sleep less because there's so much to read and understand. And I feel really embarrassed doing a podcast about testosterone because if I had met you 12 years ago, I didn't even know women had testosterone in their bodies. So I feel quite cheated as a doctor, Mo, that I've had so long without knowledge. And now I'm going to say something which not everyone might agree with, but I think testosterone is one of the most important hormones for men and women. I would completely agree.
Starting point is 00:03:58 And I would tell you that if you're going to pick one hormone, that's the best barometer of overall health, it's testosterone. And we'll talk about that. There's so many different body parts affected by testosterone in a negative and positive way. Me is the best barometer of overall health. And that's really interesting because for many years, testosterone, certainly for women, has been spoken about just in respect to libido, and we can talk about that a bit later. And for men, it's about whether they can have an erection or not.
Starting point is 00:04:29 So when I started reading about just basic physiology, what does testosterone do in our bodies as human beings, whichever gender or sex we are, I've quite quickly realized that we have cells all over our body that respond to testosterone. And testosterone has really important biological process effects in ourselves, including getting right down to our mitochondria. So it's not just there for a laugh, it's there for a reason, isn't it, and all these cells and tissues and organs. completely agree. If you think about it, you know, we talk about testosterone for women. If you think about testosterone is actually the most commonly biologically active hormone in women. It's not estrogen. He has more testosterone than any other hormone in the body. But yet we don't feel comfortable giving it back to her, which I never understood. No, and I think more and more about this actually because it's not really a menopause-related decline
Starting point is 00:05:26 unless someone is young and they have their ovaries removed, because it's more of an age-related decline, but it's also not just our ovaries that produce it. Of course, our brain produces it. We've got cells that produce testosterone in our brains, but also our adrenal glands, our muscles can produce testosterone. You know, it's not just a gynecological hormone, is it? And you bring up a good point.
Starting point is 00:05:54 You know, so men and women are a little bit different. men predominantly make their testosterone from the testicles, 90%, 10% from the adrenals. And women, it's typically half of the testosterone from the ovaries and half are from the adrenal glands. So it's slightly different. And you know, this concept of testosterone declining with age, I used to think that there was this real concept called male menopause. I used to give lectures on this. I'd say, you know, when men get older, they go through male menopause as they get older,
Starting point is 00:06:21 the testosterone declines. But today we know that's not true. actually, the aging only has a slight decline in testosterone. It's the acquisition of comorbid conditions that drops a man's testosterone over time. So diabetes, obesity, metabolic syndrome, slightly different than women, because as you know, women, they will have a little bit more of a decline in their late 20s, and then it'll kind of steady off over time, and then maybe a slight decline during menopause as well. So, you know, I do think that the age does contribute, but it's also acquisition of comorbidivation.
Starting point is 00:06:54 conditions that really bring us down, you know? And I think it's also the more I see, obviously I have a huge clinical experience. I'm very privileged with a number of women that we see through the clinic. But increasingly I see younger women, like I saw someone today who's only 32, she's had awful PMDD, premencial dysphoric disorder. And she spends three, four days a month in bed because she has so exhausted. She's been diagnosed with depression, fibromyalgia, chronic fatigue.
Starting point is 00:07:26 She had tried some synthetic combination, oral contraceptive. But her testosterone level is very low. And she also has something called lichen sclerosis, which I'm sure you're aware of. And increasingly, women with lichen sclerosis respond a lot better with testosterone than estrogen. And there are a lot more, I think, younger women
Starting point is 00:07:50 who are more testosterone deficient than estrogen deficient. But medicine often is very simplistic and guideline driven. And a lot of people say we have to give estrogen and progesterone first and then consider testosterone only if people have got reduced libido. And I saw someone else today in my clinic who's in her late 40s, her periods have nearly stopped. She's been on estrogen and progesterone. She has an okay libido. She doesn't have a partner.
Starting point is 00:08:20 But she has muscle and joint pain. She has awful brain fog. She has reduced stamina. She can't work at the moment. She's been told she can't have testosterone because her libido isn't too bad. And her testosterone level is undetectable. Yeah. I think that's very unfortunate.
Starting point is 00:08:39 You know, when patients, women come into my clinic and I speak to them about hormones, I tell them there's something called the triangle. And the triangle is estrogen, progesterone, and testosterone. And unfortunately, most people just focus on the estrogen progesterone, but they're missing the third component of the triangle. And hormone replacement is not rocket science. Essentially what we're doing is taking someone who's low and putting them back into the normal range. Nothing fancy. We're just taking someone who's low and putting them back into the normal range.
Starting point is 00:09:12 Now, there are other hormones we also think about. You should think about thyroid, cortisol. I mean, we call that outside the triangle, very important. but the triangle really is the testosterone estrogen-progester and unfortunately most women are deprived of the testosterone maybe because of fear of prescribing. And right now, most societies will say that testosterone should only be prescribed for HSDD, right?
Starting point is 00:09:36 So for low libido. But I do believe that there are other benefits with testosterone besides HSDD. And even if the literature doesn't support that yet, I think it's because we don't have enough studies. Clinically, I do see. women see improvements in muscle mass. I can see improvements in depression. I can see improvements in brain bulk. I mean, I can see a lot of other improvements besides just libido when I treat women with testosterone. And it makes sense because we have testosterone receptors all over our brain,
Starting point is 00:10:04 and also the testosterone works as a neurotransmitter and affects other neurotransmitters in our brain as well. But one of the reasons I take HRT is because I'm very worried about osteoporosis. I have doctored so many women, especially with osteoporosis of their spine, it's so painful, it's so hard to treat when it's more advanced. So I know that estrogen and progesterone help strengthen my bones and my muscles, but we have testosterone receptors in our bones as well, and we know for men it helps strengthen our bones, and it's very likely. Common sense will dictate when Timot, Mo, that it will help strengthen our bones and improve our muscle strength. Yes, absolutely. I mean, you know, some of, a lot of the data, unfortunately, comes from the study men, but when you give
Starting point is 00:10:51 men testosterone, if you look at a graph, you can see increased bone mineral density as early as three months. And a lot of the trials will be statistically significant. Every three months that you give the testosterone, you increase the bone mineral density on the men. In other words, reversing osteopinia in reversing osteoporosis. And really, it's so, so men and women are not that different in certain categories. I'd say, for example, bone mineral density. And I'm sure, Luis, you're familiar with the studies when you give women estrogen or testosterone and looking at bone mineral density, the group that does the best is the
Starting point is 00:11:25 combination group when you give them estrogen and testosterone. But we don't talk about testosterone for bone mineral density of women. We talk about vitamin C and vitamin D estrogen, but we don't talk about testosterone, which we should. So again, I think this is a big unmet need. I think there are a lot of women that could benefit from testosterone. in terms of bone mineral density, we just need the trials, we need the studies, and eventually most of the money is spent on the men, not the women.
Starting point is 00:11:52 Absolutely. And also a lot of studies now are funded by pharmaceutical companies who make the bisphosphonates, they make the other drugs that are used. And the new drug came out for osteoporosis treatment, and it's £300 a month, as opposed to HLT, which is a few pounds a month. So there is a bit of vested interest for these drugs. But often in medicine it's using some common sense and some basic knowledge. And people keep talking about we need randomized control studies.
Starting point is 00:12:22 But actually we also need other observational data. But the most important thing for me is patient choice, people being allowed to choose. And often that isn't happening. And we increasingly see women who have just been told they can't have testosterone because their libido isn't severe enough. Or they don't fulfill the criteria for HSDDD. which says you have to have at least six months of severe psychological distress. Now, I don't know about you, Mova. I went into medicine to help people not watch them for six months have severe psychological distress.
Starting point is 00:12:55 Is it like that in America that you have to wait six months to be severely psychologically distressed? Yeah. So, I mean, I guess for us, it's a clinical judgment. And so like in the UK, I assume, in the United States, it's off label. We call it off label. I think we call it off license. The same thing. You know, essentially, I can't walk into Walgreens and buy a testosterone for women. It doesn't exist, right? Which is unfortunate because testosterone has been around since 1935.
Starting point is 00:13:21 It's been a long time. It was used in women in the early 40s. Today, we still don't have an FDA-approved testosterone for women, both in the U.S. and the U.K. If we go to Australia, we could. Yeah. It's licensed or FDA-approved, but we don't have in the U.S. But basically, it's a clinical judgment that if a woman comes in and she complains of low libido, and I check her levels and it's low testosterone.
Starting point is 00:13:45 I don't necessarily wait six months to treat her with testosterone supplementation. I do think that she could benefit now. And what's the harm of giving her a three-month trial to see if it improves her sexual function and libido? I don't think there's any. And so typically I will treat her with supplementation. Now, we, because we're off-label, we do it slightly different. I mean, I tell the patients she can use a gel or a cream from a compounder. I do use a lot of pellets and injections.
Starting point is 00:14:14 And I know that there have been many guidelines saying to stay away from the injections and the pellets. The main reason why they say to stay away from the injections and the pellets is because of the worry of the superphysiologic levels. And you would see that maybe with a pellet, but with injections, you don't necessarily see that because we get it compounded. We use a much smaller dose and the women will inject once a week and it's extremely effective. And again, it's about choice. We see some people who don't absorb the cream very well, but then they absorb the gel better or vice versa. Having it through the skin or even as the injection or the pellet is far better.
Starting point is 00:14:53 Like you wouldn't give oral testosterone because it gets metabolized through the liver. So that's something that we wouldn't do. But it's very difficult in countries where you haven't got anything licensed. But the thing about it is it is just, the natural hormone. So when you're talking about injecting, you're injecting pure testosterone. This is quite different, though, isn't it, to injections that you might, I don't know, I've not tried, and I hope you haven't either, that you might buy the internet because you're going to the gym and you're wanting to build. They're not anabolic steroids in the way that these
Starting point is 00:15:26 synthetic testosterone are, are they? That's exactly right. And you mentioned something very important about the gels and the creams. So remember, I tell them by patients a very simple formula. It's the milligrams times the percent penetrance gives you the level. So let's say I give you a thousand milligrams of testosterone, but you have zero percent penetrance. You get nothing, absolutely nothing. So sometimes if someone has a low percent penetrance, you have to increase the milligram dose to get the level that you want. And so that variability on skin can be an issue. Injections typically don't have that.
Starting point is 00:16:03 You can get it into the body without having to worry about the skin penetration. you bypass the skin penetrating. Louise, sometimes patients come to me and say, which one is the best one to take? And I say, look, testosterone is a molecule. It's a compound. It's not more magical if it's in a pellet or a gel or an injection. It's the same drug.
Starting point is 00:16:22 All we're doing, these are different ways to get the drug into your body. And let's find the one that works the best. But the testosterone is the same. That's a very important point. Absolutely. And it's the same with the estradiol, which is the most anti-inflammatory type of estrogen and progesterone. And, you know, I often have conversations with Paul, my husband, as you know,
Starting point is 00:16:44 who's a reconstructive surgeon. But he could definitely, well, he does prescribe hormones for men, but he could definitely do my clinic because it's very simplistic medicine. It's three, like you say, basic hormones. It's not synthetic hormones. I don't prescribe the contraceptive implant. I don't prescribe synthetic progestogens or synthetic, Eastern, we've sort of moving away and we're making it very safe, actually, so safe that it
Starting point is 00:17:13 seems a shame, like you say, about it having to be by prescription and see a specialist, because a lot of my patients are buying all sorts of things over the counter to try and help their symptoms that we have zero evidence for and not everything we buy over the counter is safe. But there's a reason that we have these hallways. And like you say at the beginning, quite rightly, we are living so much longer. We weren't designed, really, to live this long, were we, without our hormones? So it's not just the symptoms, it's the effects of not having testosterone and hormones that can be a real problem, can't it? Yeah, Louise, these hormones improve the quality of life.
Starting point is 00:17:56 That's very important. They improve one's quality of life. Most of the time, we are spending all our time trying to increase. increase our lifespan. The lifespan now in the United States is 77 years old. Women are 79, men are 75. But the concept of health span, how long we live healthy, is 67 years old. There's a 10-year gap from when you will die to when you're healthy, that you will live in poor health. And really, what we should be doing is not trying to prolong our lifespan. We should be trying to prolong our health span. And I really believe that these hormones can make a big difference in improving
Starting point is 00:18:31 someone's health span. Not only do they improve someone's health span, they also improve someone's sex span, right? So sex, a sex span is the time of life you are able to engage in such activity. And most people want their sex span to last as long as their lifespan. Houston's hormones definitely improves someone's sex span as well. Yeah, and that is, of course, important. I found a paper recently from 1984, so when I was still at school. And it was giving estrogen to women who've had their ovaries removed. in a hysterectomy or it was giving estrogen and testosterone. And the results showed that well-being was better in people who had testosterone as well as
Starting point is 00:19:12 estrogen, which echoes what you've just said. But why is well-being not seen as so important? I don't really understand. And it's a very hard thing, I think, to measure. You know, when I started taking testosterone, the first six, eight weeks did nothing. And I thought, what's the great talk? I don't really understand. And then suddenly I realized, and this sounds a bit trivial,
Starting point is 00:19:36 but I could run up the stairs cooker. I could open the blind in the morning and smile because the sun was shining. I could empty the dishwasher in a second rather than thinking, oh, I'm just too tired. I didn't have this treacle, thinking through treacle feeling in my brain. I just felt the clouds had been lifted. Things were more in colour. And that's what patients say to me a lot,
Starting point is 00:20:00 but I don't know how you measure that, but I don't know whether you have to measure it. Can you just ask women, do you feel better because you're having a natural hormone? Is that a bad thing? At the end of the day, it's really how she feels, right? It's not about the testosterone value. How do you feel?
Starting point is 00:20:19 If you feel better in symptomatic improvement, that we've accomplished our goal, right? And I think that's very important. One thing that you probably have done that others do as well is that I tell patients this is a partnership. Okay. I'm going to give you back the triangle. I'm going to fine tune the hormones, but that is only half the story. Your job is to focus on the four pillars of health, diet, exercise, sleep, and stress reduction. If you focus on even one has a profound impact on your quality life. And if you do
Starting point is 00:20:50 those four, and I do my side as well, very powerful together. In fact, giving testosterone makes these four a lot easier. Yeah. So I do think that it's a lot of sleeping. So I do think that it's a combination and I do think if you give a patient testosterone and they lift weights it increases the muscle mass you know so again there's synergy between lifestyle and hormone replacement therapy yeah and that's crucially important and sometimes i see people who've been told by other doctors that you can only have your hormones once you've improved your lifestyle but actually it can be really difficult. I know when I didn't have always, the last thing I wanted to do was to do any
Starting point is 00:21:33 exercise at all. And also I couldn't sleep. Like I, you know, Paul can tell you, I was awful. I was tossing and turning and I was awake and I was catastrophizing at 4 in the morning. And now Paul's really annoyed because I can sleep a lot less than him. I go to bed later. I get up earlier. But I look on my ring on my device and I just sleep really efficiently. Because my own wounds are working. I'm very, is and but also I'm exercising more. I'm eating better. I'm happier. I'm, you know,
Starting point is 00:22:03 and those things as a doctor, we have to take into account. And like you say, it's a, it's a partnership with our patients. We work together. But the other thing I think people don't realize is that all our hormones are derived from cholesterol and cholesterol then obviously goes down to progesterone. But the other, the fourth bit, if you're going to make a square, is cortisone and cortisol, is our stress hormone. So as you're saying quite rightly, if we improve our well-being, we improve our mental health, our physical health, then that cortisol is going to improve as well. But often when people don't have the hormones, there's sort of our body produces more cortisol, a stress hormone and adrenaline and everything else because it's trying to compensate for what we don't
Starting point is 00:22:50 have. And it's all about doing the right dose and the right choice of treatment for the right patient. And that's what we do in everything we do in medicine, that somehow there's sort of politics and personalities that get in the way of women being able to receive hormones and men actually, because there are a lot of men who would benefit from testosterone instead of other treatments for other conditions. But it seems almost like sex hormones, maybe because they're called sex hormones, and I don't think they are. I think they're health hormones. It seems a bit like a trivial form of medicine. I don't think it is at all. It's not trivial at all. As I mentioned earlier, the best barometer of a, particularly a man, and I think also
Starting point is 00:23:33 a man's overall health, is his testosterone level. So did you know if a man has low testosterone, it significantly increases the risk for having a cardiovascular event, non-negotiable. Low testosterone increases risk for heart attack. Low testosterone increases the risk for breaking a bone, osteopenia, osteoporosis. Low testosterone increases a man's risk for diabetes and metabolic syndrome. That's non-debatable. low testosterone can be associated with depression and low testosterone will be associated with prostate cancer.
Starting point is 00:24:01 So I think, you know, it's not just about sex, Louise. It's about his overall health. And, we don't have the same amount of studies we have in men as we deal in women. But I can assume also that women with low testosterone should be an increased risk for depression. Low testosterone, women should be increased risk for osteopeniasoprosis, cardiovascular risk. We just don't have the trials. But again, I do. I do. think that those trials need to be done, and men and women in many cases are not that different. Yeah, absolutely. Of course we're not different. How much as people expect us to do, of course we're not. And we're learning all the time. But in the meantime, when we don't have the studies, we can act on common sense, we can share decision making, we can allow women to make choices.
Starting point is 00:24:46 And as I say to people, every day in my clinic, everything's reversible. You can choose, we give therapeutic trials of all sorts of medication and hormones are no different. People, people take it, don't like it, that's fine. They don't have to continue. And I think that's really important as well, isn't it? Yep. But again, and you nailed it. So I tell my patients, male and female, that if you take this medication and you don't see symptomatic improvement, there's no point continuing because I'm not here to treat your number so much. I'm here to treat you. And if you don't see the improvement, we can consider stopping. So in men, in our guidelines, typically about three months, a lot of the other guidelines, like I
Starting point is 00:25:26 issue, up to six months. So I would say for three to six months for a trial is very reasonable to see if there's any benefit. And you know, the side effect profile is not as bad as people think, particularly in women. A lot of women say, if I take it, am I going to get a beard? And am I going to get, well, you know, the difference in women is we start low. We start at a very low dose and we go up. And, you know, you can get acne. You can get facial hair. I have not yet to see a patient who has had deepening of the voice or clitor megalia in my practice. I think those typically happen super physiological level, but acne and fasciar can happen. And quite honestly, many women who do develop that will say, look, I can deal with it on the
Starting point is 00:26:03 back end. I love my testosterone. I'm not going to stop. I say, okay. Then we'll continue. But the side effect profile, we do check for erythocytosis. So I do think that's important to check. We just presented one of our big papers.
Starting point is 00:26:15 So I have a long history of treating women on pellets for many years. And we presented our data last year in San Diego at the SMS&A meeting. And what's interesting about women when I put them on palettes is that they have a much lower rate of erythocytosis and hypertension than I see in men. So just before we end though, I'm very grateful for your time. But I always, I'm just going to spring this on you because I always do three take-home tips. So for people who are listening, just three things. So if they're men or women and they're thinking about testosterone, whatever age they are, whatever symptoms they have, what are the three things that you think they should take home and really learn about testosterone
Starting point is 00:26:55 for their future health? First and foremost, if you have signs and symptoms of low testosterone, meaning low libido, low energy, sexual dysfunction, increased fat debilessation, decreased muscle mass, maybe even some depression, check your testosterone level. It's a simple, simple blood test, which can make a significant difference in your quality of life. I would also say that you're one of the best barometers, I think, of a person. person's overall health is their testosterone level. It's a marker. It's a marker of other underlying
Starting point is 00:27:26 conditions that could be existing. And so take the low testosterone seriously if you do have a low T level. And finally, I would say that, you know, our knowledge about the safety of testosterone is getting better and better. And I do think that testosterone, if prescribed appropriately, is a safe medication to prescribe. But it should be monitored. But it is a safe medication. So this dogma, this conception, that it's dangerous. It's putting fuel on the fire. It can help you really is not true. I do think that it's a safe medication, particularly if it's monitored and prescribed appropriately. I totally agree. So thank you so much for your time. And hopefully I will meet you in real life at some stage. I appreciate you. Thank you so much for the invitation, Louise.
Starting point is 00:28:11 You can find out more about Newsome Health Group by visiting www.newsonhealth.com.uk. and you can download the free Balance app on the App Store or Google Play.

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