Systematic Review of Safety of Selective Androgen Receptor Modulators in Healthy Adults: Implications for Recreational Users
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Inclusion Criteria
2.2. Search Strategy
2.3. Data Collection, Analysis, and Safety Outcomes of Interest
3. Results
3.1. Summary of Case Reports
3.2. Summary of Clinical Studies
3.2.1. General Characteristics of Studies
3.2.2. Serious Adverse Events
3.2.3. Hepatobiliary Adverse Events
3.2.4. Other Non-Serious Adverse Events
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Study | Year | Age (Years) | SARM | Dose (mg) | Duration (Weeks) | Time from Stopping to Symptoms (days) | Presenting Symptoms | Imaging | Biopsy | R Factor | Treatment and Outcome |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Baliss et al. [24] | 2020 | 31 | RAD-140 | 12 | 3 days of epigastric pain, jaundice and pruritis, scleral icterus | MRI abdomen normal | Labs down-trended after 1 month | ||||
Barbara et al. [11] | 2020 | 32 | LGD-4033 | 10 | 2 | 1–7 | diffuse itching, jaundice, acholic stool, intermittent abdominal pain, nausea, 40 lbs. weight loss, scleral icterus | US and CT-hepatomegaly MRCP, small hepatic cyst and splenomegaly, otherwise normal | Cholestatic hepatitis with mild portal, periportal, perisinusoidal fibrosis | ||
Barbara et al. [18] | 2020 | 52 | RAD-140, LGD-4033 | 17.86, 10 | 7 | 1–7 | Right upper quadrant pain, pruritus, and greasy diarrhea, scleral icterus, jaundice | MRI abdomen normal | Diffuse centrilobular canalicular cholestasis, mild portal and periportal fibrosis | 0.2 | Stop alcohol consumption, improvement in labs at 3 months |
Bittner et al. [25] | 2020 | 34 | LGD-4033 | 7.5 | 4 | 7 | Decreased appetite, worsening pruritus, dark amber urine, and cognitive ‘clouding’, jaundice, scleral icterus | US normal. CT abdomen–mild splenomegaly | Inflammation and diffuse cholestasis | ||
Flores et al. [26] | 2020 | 24 | LGD-4033 | 9 | 7 | jaundice, anorexia, nausea, lethargy, 5 kg weight loss | US normal | 8.22 | Labs normalized after 4 months | ||
Flores et al. [26] | 2020 | 49 | RAD-140 | 4 | 20–30 | Jaundice and itching | Moderate cholestasis with ductopenia and minimal fibrosis and inflammation, | 5 | Ursodiol and cholestyramine, labs normalized after 12 months | ||
Bedi et al. [12] | 2021 | 40 | Enobosarm | 8 | Jaundice, anorexia, weight loss, lethargy, and diarrhea, scleral icterus | US, CT abdomen, and MRCP normal | centrilobular cholestasis with yellow-green bile in hepatocytes and canaliculi | 0.8 | Improvement in labs over several months of follow up | ||
Gould et al. [14] | 2021 | 36 | Ostarine and Carderine | 8 | 35 | Asynchronous bilateral Achilles tendon rupture after two 4-week cycles of SARM compounds | |||||
Kintz et al. [9] | 2021 | 43 | MK-2866, Carderine | 20, 20 | 0.7 | 10 | Patient presented with severe rhabdomyolysis after cycling 74.6 miles with extreme elevations of ALT, AST, and CK | ||||
Koller et al. [16] | 2021 | 19 | LGD-4033 | 7 | 0 | Patient cycled 4 weeks on, 4 weeks off. Restarted the cycle for 3 weeks and stopped after noticing dark urine, yellow sclera, and thinner light-colored stools | US abdomen-normal | Mild septal fibrosis, canalicular cholestasis in the hepatocytes with numerous biliary plugs | 3.9 | 1000 mg ursodeoxycholic acid (UDCA) daily for 2 mo. Labs normalized after 3 months | |
Koller et al. [16] | 2021 | 28 | LGD-4033, Ostarine | 0 | For 3 months took unknown amount of SARM. After 3-week break, a formulation of SARM bought on internet was taken for 4 doses, reasons for seeking medical care unclear | MRI abdomen hepatomegaly without biliary pathology | Mild bridging fibrosis, destruction of bile ducts, centrilobular canalicular cholestasis with numerous bile plugs | 3.3 | 300 mg intravenous N-acetyl cysteine 4 times daily, 1000 mg oral UDCA daily, and 450 mg silymarin daily. Labs significantly improved at 3 months | ||
Cardaci et al. [27] | 2022 | 25 | LGD-4033, MK-677 | 10, 15 | 5 | This was an efficacy case report, no SAE’s reported, however, ALT increased from 20 IU/L to 61 IU/L after 5 weeks. The ALT returned to baseline after 4 weeks off SARM | |||||
Khan et al. [28] | 2022 | 29 | 4 | Jaundice, pruritus, fatigue, scleral icterus, light-colored stools, dark urine | CT abdomen-normal | Centrilobular bile stasis with lipofuscin pigment along with collection of neutrophils within lobular parenchyma | Labs normalized by 6 months | ||||
Lee et al. [29] | 2022 | 23 | LGD-4033, RAD-140, YK11 | 12 | 7 | Jaundice, scleral icterus, decrease in appetite, and worsening pruritis | MRI and MRCP normal | 0.8 | Ursodeoxycholic acid and hydroxyzine, labs normalized within a year | ||
Peranathan et al. [30] | 2022 | 30 | RAD-140 | Jaundice and fatigue | Unspecified image normal | Acute cholestasis with canalicular bile plugs, without evidence of ductopenia | 1.8 | ursodeoxycholic acid and cholestyramine down-trending within 60–80 days | |||
Peranathan et al. [30] | 2022 | 43 | RAD-140 | Jaundice and fatigue | Unspecified image normal | Acute cholestasis with canalicular bile plugs, without evidence of ductopenia | 2.3 | ursodeoxycholic acid and cholestyramine down-trending within 60–80 days | |||
Weinblatt et al. [13] | 2022 | 31 | Enobosarm | 2 | 0 | Itch and dark-colored urine | US abdomen, fatty liver, otherwise normal | 7.5 | Cyproheptadine, labs significantly improved after 7 days and normalized at 10 month follow up | ||
Wallstab et al. [31] | 2022 | 37 | Ligandrol (LGD-4033) | 4 mg | 8 | 60 | Jaundice, pruritus, anorexia, fatigue, 12 kg weight loss, dark urine | U/S abdomen ruled out extrahepatic cholestasis and cholecystolithiasis Fibroscan showed fibrosis 10.7 ± 2.3 kPa | Canalicular cholestasis, ductopenia, Acute portal hepatitis with early periportal fibrosis | 2.7 | Ursodeoxycholic acid and cholestyramine, Linimentum Aquosum ointment |
Author | Year | Study Design | SARM | Study Population | Study Arms and Total Subjects | Summary of Adverse Events |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Marcantonio et al. [32] | 2010 | Randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, parallel group | MK-3984 and MK-2866 | Healthy postmenopausal women | Placebo (N = 22) MK-2866 3 mg daily (N = 22) MK-3984 50 mg daily (N = 22) MK-3984 125 mg daily (N = 22) Total exposed = 66 Total N = 88 | 7/44 subjects receiving the 50 mg or 125 mg dose of MK-3984 had ALT elevation > 3 × ULN and were discontinued from the study, but no significant ALT elevation was reported for the 3 mg dose of MK-2866. |
Meglasson et al. [33] | 2010 | Double-blind, placebo-controlled ascending single dose | LGD-4033 | Healthy adult males | 0.1–22 mg | No SAE’s reported. |
Dalton et al. [34] | 2011 | Double-blind, placebo-controlled phase II trial | Enobosarm | Elderly men and postmenopausal women | Daily doses of placebo, 0.1, 0.3, 1, or 3 mg of Enobosarm for 86 days. (N = 24 per group, 50% male and female) Total Exposed = 96 Total N = 120 | No SAE’s reported. ALT increased in dose-dependent fashion (8 total patients with 6 of 8 in highest dose 3 mg group). In these 7 patients, ALT elevations resolved while on drug. One subject discontinued (3 mg dose) due to ALT elevation of 4.2 X ULN and returned to normal after drug discontinuation. Dose-dependent reduction in HDL. |
Yi et al. [35] | 2012 | Pharmacokinetic and Metabolism Study | LY2452473 | Healthy males | 15 mg (N = 6) Total Exposed N = 6 Total N = 6 | No safety events reported. |
Basaria et al. [36] | 2013 | Placebo-controlled ascending single and multiple dose PK | LGD-4033 | Healthy adult males | Placebo (N = 33) 0.1 mg (N = 18) 0.3 mg (N = 11) 1 mg (N = 14) Total Exposed = 43 Total N = 76 | No SAE’s, no study discontinuation due to adverse events, no clinically significant changes in liver enzymes. Dose-dependent reduction in HDL but returned to baseline 25 days post-last dose. |
Papanicolaou et al. [21] | 2013 | Randomized placebo-controlled efficacy and safety | MK-0773 | Females with sarcopenia | Placebo (N = 89) MK-0773 50 mg BID (N = 81) Total Exposed N = 81 Total N = 170 | 13.5% (N = 23) of participants had an AE possibly, probably or definitely related to study therapy. The most common AE leading to discontinuation was an increase in ALT (N = 5, 6.2%). This occurred within 6–8 weeks and all ALT returned to baseline with no clinical sequelae after stopping therapy. Hematocrit increases >3% were significantly more frequent in the MK-0773 group compared with placebo. Trend towards increased blood pressure in MK-0773 compared with placebo (5 mmgHg difference from baseline at 6 months in treatment vs. placebo group). |
Bhattacharya et al. [37] | 2016 | Placebo-controlled ascending single and multiple dose PK | PF-06260414 | Healthy adult males | Western: Placebo N = 17 SAD: 1–400 mg single dose (N = 6 per group) MAD: 3–100 mg BID (N = 6 per group) Japanese: Placebo (N = 2) 30 mg BID (N = 5) Total Exposed = 53 Total N = 72 | No severe AE’s. A total of 42 of 67 treatment-emergent AE’s were considered treatment-related. Three subjects receiving SARM discontinued the study (anxiety, hypertension and ALT increase). ALT increase occurred in 10 subjects (9 SARM subjects and 1 placebo subject). Five subjects receiving 100 mg BID had ALT increases and 3 Japanese subjects receiving 30 mg BID had ALT increases. One subject in 100 mg BID cohort had ALT increases as early as day 6 with peak of 343 IU/L on day 14, which normalized by day 42 leading to discontinuation. Dose-dependent decreases in HDL |
Coss et al. [38] | 2016 | Drug–drug interaction study, crossover design with 6 to 10-day washout period | Enobosarm | Healthy adult males | All subjects dosed with Enobosarm 3 mg. The following studies had two occasions of Enobosarm and one occasion of the additional drug: Itraconazole 200 mg (N = 12) Rifampin 600 mg (N = 12) Probenecid 500 mg (N = 15) The following two studies had one occasion of Enobosarm and two occasions of the following drugs: Celecoxib 200 mg (N = 42) Rosuvastatin 10 mg (N = 49) Total Exposed N = 132 Total N = 132 | No SAE’s, 21% reported AE’s while taking Enobosarm, however only 8 subject’s AE’s were determined to be related to Enobosarm. The most common AE was headache. |
Clark et al. [39] | 2017 | Placebo-controlled ascending single and multiple dose PK | GSK2881078 | Healthy adult males and postmenopausal women | SAD: 0–0.2 mg, N = 10 all males) MAD: Placebo (N = 22) 0.05–0.75 mg (N = 67, 24 female subjects) Total Exposed N = 77 Total N = 99 | Dose-dependent reductions in HDL. Female subject on active treatment developed a maculopapular rash and ALT increase to 2.9 X the ULN and discontinued the study. Another female developed and ALT elevation to 2.3 X the ULN. Two men on active treatment developed muscle soreness after demanding activity in the follow-up period 14 and 28 days, respectively, with elevation in CPK (17,841 and 4590 IU, respectively and mild elevations in ALT, both resolved over 3 weeks). No other subjects showed ALT ≥ 2 X ULN during treatment. |
Neil et al. [40] | 2018 | Randomized double-blinded, placeb0-controlled dose-escalation PKPD | GSK2881078 | Healthy elderly men and women | Cohort 1: Males: 0.75 mg or 1.5 mg Females: 0.5 mg or 0.75 mg Dosed twice daily for 3 days followed by daily for 28 days. (N = 10 each dosing group, 2:1 placebo) Cohort 2: Males: 4 mg daily for 56 days Females: 0.35 mg daily for 28 days followed by 1.5 mg daily for 28 days (N = 10 in each dosing group, 2:1 placebo) Total exposed N = 62 Total N = 93 | 62.9% receiving SARM compared with 13.3% placebo had ALT elevations. All elevations in ALT were transient occurring from approximately day 14 beginning to resolve and returning to baseline by day 28 of dosing. ALT incidence was most frequent in highest dose group 4 mg, with 2 individuals having a 5–10 X ULN elevation in ALT. |
Peters et al. [41] | 2018 | Single arm, non-randomized efficacy study | GTX-024 (Enobosarm) | Postmenopausal females with stress incontinence | 3 mg daily Total Exposed N = 19 Total N = 19 | Minimal adverse events with none above Grade I. Elevated ALT in 1 of 19 subjects. |
Ristic et al. [42] | 2018 | Randomized placebo-controlled study | VK5211 (ligandrol) | Patients >65 recovering from hip fracture 3–7 weeks prior | Placebo 0.5 mg daily 1 mg daily 2 mg daily Total N = 108, number in each arm not specified. | No SAE’s reported. |
NCT01401543 [43] | 2019 | Bioavailability study crossover design | LY2452473 | Healthy male | 5 mg LY2452473 + 5 mg tadalafil standard and at three different particle sizes (10, 40 and 90 microns) single dose Total Exposed = 24 Total N = 24 | No SAE’s, most common AE was headache, no report of liver enzymes. |
NCT01160289 [44] | 2019 | Randomized placebo-control trial | LY2452473 | Males with erectile dysfunction | 5 mg tadalafil + placebo (N = 87) 10 mg tadalafil + placebo (N = 89) 1 mg LY2452473 + tadalafil daily (N = 85) 5 mg LY2452473 + tadalafil daily (N = 97) 5 mg LY2452473 + placebo (N = 52) Total Exposed N = 234 Total N = 410 | SAE’s occurred slightly more commonly in patients randomized to LY2452473 (4 of 234 subjects) compared with 0 of 176 subjects randomized to a placebo group. SAE’s included humerus fracture, pulmonary embolus, tubular interstitial nephritis, arrythmia, lobar pneumonia and cardiac arrest. Association with SARM not noted. Other AE’s occurred at similar rates between SARM and placebo groups (20–30% of patients). No patient in the SARM groups had AST elevation. |
NCT03241342 [45] | 2020 | Randomized placebo-controlled study | GTX-024 | Females 18–80 years old with stress incontinence | Placebo (N = 165) GTX-024 1 mg daily (N = 163) GTX-024 3 mg daily (N = 163) Total Exposed N = 326 Total N = 491 | 5 total SAE’s in GTX-024 groups vs. 4 in placebo. SAE’s included hip fracture, dysesthesia, myocardial infarction, cerebral vascular accident and goiter. Non-SAE’s were also similar in GTX-024 vs. placebo group. Only 2 of 326 subjects experienced increased ALT. |
Efimenko et al. [46] | 2021 | Cross-sectional survey study in SARM users | LGD-4033 RAD-140 MK-2866 | Most commonly healthy adult men (98.5%) that were 18–29 (72.3%) years old | Total survey responders N = 343 | 54.5% of users reported adverse effects related to SARM use. The most common were mood swings (22.4%), decreased testes size (20.7%) and acne (15.2%). The proportion of responders reporting a side effect increased significantly with longer reported exposure times to SARM. |
Pencina et al. [47] | 2021 | Randomized placebo-controlled, double blind | OPK-88004 | Prostate cancer survivors | Placebo N = 36 1 mg daily N = 28 5 mg daily N = 14 15 mg daily N = 14 Total Exposed N = 78 Total N = 114 | 3 SAE’s not considered treatment-related were coronary artery bypass grafting, renal cancer and lung and liver cancer. Dose-dependent increases in AST and ALT with only one participant in the 15-mg group having AST and ALT elevations above the ULN. Dose-dependent decreases in HDL. |
NCT03297398 [48] | 2021 | Randomized placebo control trial | OPK-88004 | Males with symptoms of benign prostatic hyperplasia | Placebo (N = 38) OPK-88004 15 mg (N = 40) OPK-88004 25 mg (N = 38) Total Exposed N = 78 Total N = 114 | 2 subjects had SAE’s in 25 mg group (coronary artery disease, biliary obstruction and cholangitis)—association not noted. Other AE’s occurred at much higher rates in SARM groups (60–70%) compared with placebo (10–15%). This appeared to be heavily driven from lab abnormalities such as decreased testosterone, decreased LDL and decreased HDL. ALT increased in 4 subjects randomized to SARM (3/40 and 1/38 in the 15 mg and 25 mg groups, respectively). |
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Vignali, J.D.; Pak, K.C.; Beverley, H.R.; DeLuca, J.P.; Downs, J.W.; Kress, A.T.; Sadowski, B.W.; Selig, D.J. Systematic Review of Safety of Selective Androgen Receptor Modulators in Healthy Adults: Implications for Recreational Users. J. Xenobiot. 2023, 13, 218-236. https://doi.org/10.3390/jox13020017
Vignali JD, Pak KC, Beverley HR, DeLuca JP, Downs JW, Kress AT, Sadowski BW, Selig DJ. Systematic Review of Safety of Selective Androgen Receptor Modulators in Healthy Adults: Implications for Recreational Users. Journal of Xenobiotics. 2023; 13(2):218-236. https://doi.org/10.3390/jox13020017
Chicago/Turabian StyleVignali, Jonathan D., Kevin C. Pak, Holly R. Beverley, Jesse P. DeLuca, John W. Downs, Adrian T. Kress, Brett W. Sadowski, and Daniel J. Selig. 2023. "Systematic Review of Safety of Selective Androgen Receptor Modulators in Healthy Adults: Implications for Recreational Users" Journal of Xenobiotics 13, no. 2: 218-236. https://doi.org/10.3390/jox13020017
APA StyleVignali, J. D., Pak, K. C., Beverley, H. R., DeLuca, J. P., Downs, J. W., Kress, A. T., Sadowski, B. W., & Selig, D. J. (2023). Systematic Review of Safety of Selective Androgen Receptor Modulators in Healthy Adults: Implications for Recreational Users. Journal of Xenobiotics, 13(2), 218-236. https://doi.org/10.3390/jox13020017