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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Perioperative Testosterone Supplementation Improves Short-Term Outcomes of Anterior Urethroplasty in Hypogonadal Models: Insights From a Preclinical Rabbit Study.

Journal:
Urology
Year:
2025
Authors:
Xue, Jingdong et al.
Affiliation:
Department of Urology · China
Species:
rabbit

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To investigate whether perioperative androgen supplementation could improve surgical outcomes of anterior urethroplasty, particularly in hypogonadal patients, we evaluated the effects and mechanisms of systemic androgen supplementation at different doses in a castrated New Zealand rabbit model of bulbar urethroplasty. METHODS: Fifteen castrated and five non-castrated adult male New Zealand rabbits were randomized into four groups: non-castrated control, castrated control (0&#xa0;mg/kg), physiological dose (2.5&#xa0;mg/kg), and supraphysiological dose (5&#xa0;mg/kg) of testosterone propionate. All rabbits underwent bulbar urethroplasty via end-to-end anastomosis and were sacrificed one month postoperatively. Plasma testosterone levels, urethrograms, gross specimens, histopathological data, immunofluorescence, and transcriptomic profiles were assessed and compared among the groups. RESULTS: Plasma testosterone levels in the castrated control group (5.88&#xa0;&#xb1;&#xa0;0.19&#xa0;nmol/L) were significantly lower than those in the physiological dose group (7.56&#xa0;&#xb1;&#xa0;0.53&#xa0;nmol/L), supraphysiological dose group (8.98&#xa0;&#xb1;&#xa0;0.35&#xa0;nmol/L), and non-castrated control group (7.30&#xa0;&#xb1; 0.29&#xa0;nmol/L; P <.0001). One month postoperatively, androgen supplementation significantly increased urethral lumen diameter, urethral circumference, androgen receptor, and CD31 expression compared to the castrated control group (P&#xa0;<.001). Transcriptomic analysis revealed upregulation of angiogenesis-related genes and suppression of fibrosis-related genes in the androgen-supplemented groups, along with modulation of inflammatory, proliferative, and metabolic pathways. CONCLUSION: Perioperative androgen supplementation increases urethral lumen diameter, enhances peri-urethral vascularization, and suppresses short-term fibrosis-related gene expression, thereby improving outcomes of bulbar urethroplasty in hypogonadal rabbits. However, the long-term effects and clinical applicability of systemic androgen supplementation warrant further investigation.

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Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/40209999/