Canadian trends in testosterone therapy
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.5489/cuaj.6892Keywords:
Testosterone, hypogonadism, prescribing, drug utilization/trends, practice patternsAbstract
Introduction: Rates of testosterone therapy (TT) prescribing dropped dramatically following the U.S. Food and Drug Administration and Health Canada warning regarding potential cardiovascular morbidity in 2014. Since then, prescription rates appear to be increasing in the U.S., however, data on TT use in Canada is lacking. Current database studies suffer from incomplete prescription capture, lack of information on continued use, and confounding from concurrent population growth. Nova Scotia (NS) is a Canadian province with minimal population growth over the past decade. NS tracks every testosterone prescription and refill through their prescription monitoring program (NSPMP). All testosterone prescriptions must be written on triplicate forms, allowing for comprehensive tracking. The purpose of this study is to describe the long-term prescription trends of testosterone in a mid-sized Canadian province using a database that captures 100% of all TT prescriptions written and filled.
Methods: Data were extracted from the NSPMP database on all prescriptions and prescription refills of androgens for men over 18 years of age from 2007–2019. Population statistics were gained using publicly available data from Statistics Canada. Analysis of patterns on individual years and over time were examined for number of patients, prescriptions, and prescribers, as well as formulation.
Results: The male population of Nova Scotia remained relatively stable throughout the study period (2007: 455 064; 2019: 475 478; population increase of 4.3%). A total of 7883 men (1.7% of the male population) received a prescription for TT during the study period; 1673 men received only one prescription in the entire study period and 5446 men remained on TT for longer than six months. Of the 1730 men under 45 who were prescribed TT, 75% (n=1298) of them stayed on it for more than six months; 1856 men (24%) switched the type of testosterone they were on during the study period. The number of men receiving TT yearly increased by 98%, from 1235 in 2007 to 2448 in 2019. The number of men receiving TT plateaued in 2014, except for men under age 35, in whom it has steadily increased every year since 2007. Interestingly, primary care providers (PCPs) wrote 92% of all prescriptions, on average (interquartile range 90–93).
Conclusions: In a mid-sized Canadian province with stable population growth, prescriptions of testosterone increased until 2014, and then either stabilized or decreased. TT prescriptions in young men have continued to increase yearly. Injectable and gel-based formulations have increased in popularity over the past decade. Future efforts to educate prescribers, especially surrounding the effects on fertility in young men, should be largely focused on PCPs.
Downloads
Downloads
Published
How to Cite
Issue
Section
License
You, the Author(s), assign your copyright in and to the Article to the Canadian Urological Association. This means that you may not, without the prior written permission of the CUA:
- Post the Article on any Web site
- Translate or authorize a translation of the Article
- Copy or otherwise reproduce the Article, in any format, beyond what is permitted under Canadian copyright law, or authorize others to do so
- Copy or otherwise reproduce portions of the Article, including tables and figures, beyond what is permitted under Canadian copyright law, or authorize others to do so.
The CUA encourages use for non-commercial educational purposes and will not unreasonably deny any such permission request.
You retain your moral rights in and to the Article. This means that the CUA may not assert its copyright in such a way that would negatively reflect on your reputation or your right to be associated with the Article.
The CUA also requires you to warrant the following:
- That you are the Author(s) and sole owner(s), that the Article is original and unpublished and that you have not previously assigned copyright or granted a licence to any other third party;
- That all individuals who have made a substantive contribution to the article are acknowledged;
- That the Article does not infringe any proprietary right of any third party and that you have received the permissions necessary to include the work of others in the Article; and
- That the Article does not libel or violate the privacy rights of any third party.