Is there a correlation between androgens and sexual desire in women?

S Wåhlin-Jacobsen, AT Pedersen… - The journal of sexual …, 2015 - academic.oup.com
S Wåhlin-Jacobsen, AT Pedersen, E Kristensen, NC Læssøe, M Lundqvist, AS Cohen
The journal of sexual medicine, 2015academic.oup.com
Introduction For women, the correlation between circulating androgens and sexual desire is
inconclusive. Substitution with androgens at physiological levels improves sexual function in
women who experience decreased sexual desire and androgen deficiency from surgical
menopause, pituitary disease, and age-related decline in androgen production in the
ovaries. Measuring bioactive testosterone is difficult and new methods have been proposed,
including measuring the primary androgen metabolite androsterone glucuronide (ADT-G) …
Introduction
For women, the correlation between circulating androgens and sexual desire is inconclusive. Substitution with androgens at physiological levels improves sexual function in women who experience decreased sexual desire and androgen deficiency from surgical menopause, pituitary disease, and age-related decline in androgen production in the ovaries. Measuring bioactive testosterone is difficult and new methods have been proposed, including measuring the primary androgen metabolite androsterone glucuronide (ADT-G).
Aim
The aim of this study was to investigate a possible correlation between serum levels of androgens and sexual desire in women and whether the level of ADT-G is better correlated than the level of circulating androgens with sexual desire.
Methods
This was a cross-sectional study including 560 healthy women aged 19–65 years divided into three age groups. Correlations were considered to be statistically significant at P < 0.05.
Main Outcome Measure
Sexual desire was determined as the total score of the sexual desire domain of the Female Sexual Function Index. Total testosterone (TT), calculated free testosterone (FT), androstenedione, dehydroepiandrosterone sulfate (DHEAS), and ADT-G were analyzed using mass spectrometry.
Results
Sexual desire correlated overall with FT and androstenedione in the total cohort of women. In a subgroup of women aged 25–44 years with no use of systemic hormonal contraception, sexual desire correlated with TT, FT, androstenedione, and DHEAS. In women aged 45–65 years, androstenedione correlated with sexual desire. No correlations between ADT-G and sexual desire were identified.
Conclusions
In the present study, FT and androstenedione were statistically significantly correlated with sexual desire in the total cohort of women. ADT-G did not correlate more strongly than circulating androgens with sexual desire and is therefore not superior to measuring circulating androgens by mass spectrometry.
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