Abstract
Testosterone administration to male athletes can be safely detected in the vast majority of cases by the urinary excretion ratio of testosterone to epitestosterone glucuronides (TG/EG), which may not exceed 6. Some rare cases of physiologically high TG/EG ratios (between 6 and 12) are encountered; these may be attributed to a dysregulation of the testicular secretions of epitestosterone which is decreased, and of epitestosterone sulphate (ES) which is normal or increased. Impaired hydrolysis of circulating epitestosterone sulphate by deficiency of a specific sulphatase acting on 17α-sulphates must also be considered as a possible reason for the decreased availability of epitestosterone for hepatic glucuronidation. Urinary excretions of conjugates and metabolites of testosterone and epitestosterone (expressed in nmol/mmol creatinine) have been determined by gas chromatography-mass spectrometry associated with stable isotope dilution, in a reference population of 90 healthy male subjects and in 12 subjects with chronic TG/EG>4. Urinary excretion ratios such as TG/(EG+ES), EG/ES and TG/5-androstene-3β,17α-diol glucuronide are shown to be efficient criteria which allow discrimination between physiologically high and pharmacologically high TG/EG ratios. A simple oral loading test with deuterium-labelled epitestosterone demonstrates the difference between hepatic and total epitestosterone metabolism clearly, particularly in subjects with physiologically high TG/EG in comparison with subjects with normal TG/EG. Journal of Endocrinology (1994) 142, 353–360