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Endocrine Abstracts (2024) 104 P189 | DOI: 10.1530/endoabs.104.P189

SFEIES24 Poster Presentations Reproductive Endocrinology (15 abstracts)

Is there an association between daylight hours and serum testosterone levels in men?

Mark Livingston 1 , Adrian Heald 2 , Geoff Hackett 3 , Harishnath Ramachandran 4 & Sudarshan Ramachandran 5


1Walsall Manor Hospital, West Midlands, United Kingdom; 2Salford Royal Hospital, Salford, United Kingdom; 3Aston University, Birmingham, United Kingdom; 4Norwich Medical School, Norwich, United Kingdom; 5University Hospitals Birmingham NHS Foundation Trust, Sutton Coldfield, United Kingdom


Introduction: Studies assessing variability of serum testosterone levels associated with seasonal environmental factors have been contradictory. We assessed associations between the seasons and changes (δ) in seasonality indices and male serum total testosterone (δTT) variability.

Methods: Data were collected in 144 men with paired serum TT samples (126 non-fasting/18 fasting) analysed at Walsall Manor Hospital, UK (52.3 degrees North). Seasonal factors (ambient temperature within 15 minutes of sampling, humidity, precipitation, duration of daylight on the day of sampling, monthly average ambient temperature, and precipitation) were obtained from local weather-station archives. Sign-rank test determined inter-sample differences between TT and seasonality indices. Linear regression analyses studied associations between δTT and δ seasonal indices in the total cohort and subgroups (stratified by medians of age, TT and men with paired non-fasting samples). Sign-rank determined whether serum TT differed between the seasons.

Results: Median inter-sample interval was 63 days. No significant inter-sample differences were evident regarding serum TT levels and seasonality indices. No associations were noted between δTT and δ seasonality indices in the total cohort and subgroups stratified by age and TT. Interestingly, δ ambient temperature (P = 0.012) and daylight duration (P = 0.032) were inversely associated with δTT in the 126 men in the non-fasting group (dependent variable). Only a small degree of the variability in the δTT was accounted by the above-mentioned independent variables. The seasons did not appear to influence serum TT values.

Conclusions: No relation was shown between seasonality and serum TT in the total cohort, thus possibly eliminating a confounding variable that could affect laboratory and clinical practice. It may be that seasonal variation in length of day is too modest at this location to demonstrate significant associations, hence our findings are latitude specific. We suggest that further data analysis to address this question in areas with greater seasonal variation would be appropriate.

Volume 104

Joint Irish-UK Endocrine Meeting 2024

Belfast, Northern Ireland
14 Oct 2024 - 15 Oct 2024

Society for Endocrinology 

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