Secondary exposure to Testosterone gel
The FDA ( Food and Drug Administration ) announced that it is requiring manufacturers of two prescription topical testosterone gel products, AndroGel 1% and Testim 1%, to include a boxed warning on the products’ labels. The agency is requiring this action after receiving reports of adverse effects in children who were inadvertently exposed to Testosterone through contact with another person being treated with these products ( secondary exposure ).
The gels are approved for use in men who either no longer produce testosterone or produce it in very low amounts. Both products are applied once daily, to the shoulders or upper arms. Only AndroGel 1% is approved for application to the abdomen. Precautions in the current labels instruct users to wash their hands after using the product and to cover the treated skin with clothing.
In 2007, 1.4 million prescriptions for AndroGel - the most commonly dispensed gel form of Testosterone - were dispensed by US retail pharmacies. Approximately 25,000 of those were dispensed for off-label use in women. During the same period, some 370,000 prescriptions were dispensed for Testim, according to data from SDI: Vector One National.
Despite the currently labeled precautions, as of Dec. 1, 2008, the FDA has received reports of eight cases of secondary exposure to Testosterone in children ranging in age from nine months to five years. Since that time, additional reports of secondary exposure have been received by the agency and are presently under review.
Of the fully reviewed cases, adverse events reported in these children included inappropriate enlargement of the genitalia ( penis or clitoris ), premature development of pubic hair, advanced bone age, increased libido, and aggressive behavior.
In most cases, the signs and symptoms regressed when the child no longer was exposed to the product. However, in a few cases, enlarged genitalia did not fully return to age-appropriate size and bone age remained modestly greater than the child’s chronological age.
In some cases, children had to undergo invasive diagnostic procedures and, in at least one case, a child was hospitalized and underwent surgery due to a delay in recognizing the underlying cause of the signs and symptoms.
Signs of inappropriate virilization ( development of male secondary sexual characteristics ) in children and the possibility of secondary testosterone exposure should be brought to a health care provider’s attention.
Source: FDA, 2009
XagenaMedicine2009
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