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Associations between Salivary Testosterone Levels, Androgen‐Related Genetic Polymorphisms, and Self‐Estimated Ejaculation Latency Time

Authors :
Patrick Jern, PhD
Lars Westberg, PhD
Carina Ankarberg‐Lindgren, PhD
Ada Johansson, PhD
Annika Gunst, BA (Psych)
N. Kenneth Sandnabba, PhD
Pekka Santtila, PhD
Source :
Sexual Medicine, Vol 2, Iss 3, Pp 107-114 (2014)
Publication Year :
2014
Publisher :
Oxford University Press, 2014.

Abstract

Introduction: Recently, testosterone (T) has been shown to be associated with premature ejaculation (PE) symptoms in the literature. Furthermore, studies suggest that the etiology of PE is partly under genetic control. Aim: The aim of this study was to reassess findings suggesting an association between testosterone (T) and a key symptom of PE, ejaculation latency time (ELT), as well as exploratively investigating associations between six androgen‐related genetic polymorphisms and ELT. Materials and Methods: Statistical analyses were performed on a population‐based sample of 1,429 Finnish men aged 18–45 years (M = 26.9, SD = 4.7). Genotype information was available for 1,345–1,429 of these (depending on the polymorphism), and salivary T samples were available from 384 men. Two androgen receptor gene‐linked, two 5‐alpha‐reductase type 2‐gene‐linked, and two sex hormone‐binding globuline gene‐linked polymorphisms were genotyped. Main Outcome Measures: Ejaculatory function was assessed using self‐reported ELT. Results: We found no association between salivary T levels and ELT. We found a nominally significant association between a 5‐alpha‐reductase type 2‐gene‐linked polymorphism (rs2208532) and ELT, but this association did not remain significant after correction for multiple testing. One single nucleotide polymorphism in the sex hormone‐binding globulin gene (rs1799941) moderated (significantly after correction for multiple testing) the association between salivary T and ELT, so that A:A genotype carriers had significantly lower salivary T levels as a function of increasing ELT compared with other genotype groups. Conclusions: We were unable to find support for the hypothesis suggesting an association between T levels and ELT, possibly because of the low number of phenotypically extreme cases (the sample used in the present study was population based). Our results concerning genetic associations should be interpreted with caution until replication studies have been conducted. Jern P, Westberg L, Ankarberg‐Lindgren C, Johansson A, Gunst A, Sandnabba NK, and Santtila P. Associations between salivary testosterone levels, androgen‐related genetic polymorphisms, and self‐estimated ejaculation latency time. Sex Med 2014;2:107–114.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20501161
Volume :
2
Issue :
3
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Sexual Medicine
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.9b24870d7ccd405f93af4c683d04199a
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/sm2.34