It has been well documented that selective estrogen receptor mod- ulators (SERMs) can prevent bone loss in ovariectomized rats and postmenopausal women. The purposes of this study were to determine the effects of a potent and orally active SERM, lasofoxifene (CP- 336,156), on bone mass, bone strength, total serum cholesterol, pros- tate weight, and histology in adult male orchidectomized (ORX) rats. Sprague Dawley male rats at 10 months of age were divided into 6 groups, with 10 rats/group. The first group was necropsied on day 0 and served as basal controls. The remaining rats were either sham operated (n 5 10) and treated orally with vehicle, or ORX (n 5 40) and treated with either vehicle or lasofoxifene at 1, 10, or 100 mg/kgzday for 60 days. Total serum cholesterol, prostate weight and histology, distal femoral bone mineral density (DFBMD) by dual energy x-ray absorptiometry, and static and dynamic bone histomorphometry of the third lumbar vertebral body were determined. Maximal load and stiffness of the fifth lumbar vertebral body were also determined by compression tests. Age-related decreases in DFBMD (29%) and trabecular bone vol- ume (TBV; 213%) of the third lumbar vertebral body were found in sham-operated rats compared with basal controls. ORX induced sig- nificant increases in total serum cholesterol (131%), eroded surface (148%), activation frequency of bone turnover (1103%) and signifi- cant decreases in prostate weight (289%), DFBMD (214%), TBV (223%), and maximal load (217%) compared with basal controls. Compared with sham controls, ORX induced significant increases in eroded perimeter and activation frequency. Lasofoxifene decreased body weight in all dose groups compared with both sham and ORX control values. Compared with ORX controls, ORX rats treated with lasofoxifene at 10 or 100 mg/kgzday had significantly lower percent eroded perimeter activation frequency and significantly higher DFBMD, TBV, and maximal load. Further, lasofoxifene at 10 and 100 mg/kgzday significantly decreased total serum cholesterol by 46% and 68% in ORX rats, whereas no effect was found in prostate weight and histology parameters compared with ORX control values. These data showed that lasofoxifene prevented bone loss by inhibiting bone turn- over associated with aging and orchidectomy in 10-month-old male rats. Further, lasofoxifene decreased total serum cholesterol and did not affect the prostate in these rats. These results suggest that SERMs such as lasofoxifene may be useful therapeutic agents for preventing bone loss in elderly men with some degree of hypogonad- ism. (Endocrinology 141: 1338 -1344, 2000)