The overall goal of this study is to evaluate the effect of a testosterone drug called
Depo-Testosterone (or 'testosterone cypionate'), an FDA-approved drug for improving
fatigue, sexual function, quality of life, body composition, muscle strength, and
physical activity in young cancer survivors who report fatigue and have low testosterone.
Main hypothesis is that Testosterone administration in young male cancer survivors who
are in remission for at least 1 year, report cancer-related fatigue and have symptomatic
testosterone deficiency will be associated with greater improvements in fatigue scores
compared with placebo.
Additional locations may be listed on ClinicalTrials.gov for NCT04049331.
Locations matching your search criteria
United States
Massachusetts
Boston
Dana-Farber Cancer InstituteStatus: Active
Contact: Shehzad Basaria
Brigham and Women's HospitalStatus: Active
Contact: Shehzad Basaria
The overall goal of this proposal is to evaluate the efficacy of testosterone replacement
therapy in improving fatigue and other outcomes such as sexual function, quality of life,
body composition, muscle strength and physical activity in a double-blind, randomized,
placebo-controlled trial in young cancer survivors who report fatigue and have
testosterone deficiency.
Fatigue is one of the most prevalent and debilitating symptoms in men with cancer
affecting 70-100% of patients irrespective of their age. Cancer-related fatigue is
experienced by patients not only during active cancer treatment, but is also highly
prevalent in cancer survivors who exhibit persistent fatigue months to years after the
end of their treatment with the highest prevalence being in recipients of chemotherapy
and/or radiation therapy.
In addition to fatigue, sexual dysfunction is also highly prevalent in male cancer
survivors. Male cancer survivors also have increased fat mass and decreased lean body
mass, a phenotype that predisposes them to reduced muscle strength. This phenotype of
fatigue, sexual dysfunction and adverse body composition is commonly encountered in
non-cancer patient populations with testosterone deficiency, a condition which is also
highly prevalent (50-90%) in cancer survivors. Pivotal trials of testosterone replacement
therapy in non-cancer patient populations have shown an improvement in fatigue, sexual
function and body composition in men randomized to testosterone compared with placebo.
However, the efficacy of testosterone replacement therapy on cancer-related fatigue has
not been studied.
Lead OrganizationSeattle Institute for Biomedical and Clinical Research