TRT Safety Monitoring

Overview

Polycythemia is the primary safety concern with testosterone replacement therapy. Elevated hematocrit (>54%) is an independent risk factor for MACE and VTE in men on TRT. This note provides the evidence-backed safety monitoring protocol and formulation selection framework for longevity-oriented coaching.


Hematocrit zones

ZoneHematocritAction
Normal≤0.48Standard monitoring
Elevated0.48–0.52Increase monitoring frequency; consider formulation switch
Polycythemia0.52–0.54Phlebotomy review; assess sleep apnea, hypoxia, vol status
Action required>0.54Immediate clinical action; dose reduction or formulation switch to transdermal

Mechanism: Testosterone increases renal EPO production and reduces hepcidin → enhanced iron bioavailability → elevated erythropoiesis → elevated hematocrit. Long-acting IM formulations carry the highest risk (~≥10% vs 1–5% with transdermal gels).


Baseline labs

Required before initiating any hormonal intervention:

LabAssay noteKey threshold
Total testosteroneLC-MS/MS (not immunoassay)<300 ng/dL + symptoms supports diagnosis
Free testosteroneEquilibrium dialysisMore accurate than analog assay in borderline cases
EstradiolSensitive assay (LC-MS/MS)Low E2 (<15 pg/mL) also problematic
LH / FSHDistinguishes primary vs secondary hypogonadism
SHBGModulates free T interpretation
ProlactinElevated prolactin suppresses gonadotropins
CBC with differentialHematocrit baselineFlag if >0.50
PSAFlag if >4.0; urology referral before initiating
Fasting glucose / HbA1cMetabolic baseline
Lipid panelTRT can suppress HDL; baseline needed
AST / ALTHepatotoxicity risk only with oral 17α-alkylated forms
Vitamin DOften deficient; relevant for bone

Monitoring intervals

ParameterFrequency
Hematocrit (CBC)q3 months (titration phase); q6 months (stable)
Comprehensive hormone panelq6 weeks after dose change; then q6–12 months
DEXA body compositionAnnually (q6 months for granular feedback)
Lipid panelBaseline; q6–12 months
PSAq6–12 months
Blood pressureEvery visit (new FDA 2025 ABPM warning)
E2 (sensitive assay)q6–12 months

Formulation selection framework

Priority 1: Fertility desired

If the patient wants to preserve fertility:

  • Recommended: hCG 250–500 IU SC 2–3x/week; Enclomiphene 12.5–25 mg/day
  • Avoid: Testosterone enanthate/cypionate IM; standard testosterone gel

Priority 2: Hematocrit elevated (≥0.48)

Elevated baseline hematocrit or polycythemia history:

  • Recommended: Transdermal gel 1% or 1.62% daily; SC testosterone enanthate 50–100 mg/week
  • Avoid: IM testosterone enanthate/cypionate 200+ mg biweekly (supraphysiologic peaks)

Priority 3: High CV risk

Pre-existing cardiovascular disease (TRAVERSE population):

  • Recommended: Transdermal gel 1% or 1.62% daily — lowest polycythemia risk
  • Avoid: High-dose IM; supraphysiologic dosing

Priority 4: Oral preference

  • Recommended: Jatenzo (testosterone undecanoate oral capsules) — FDA-approved 2019; requires fatty meal; 6.8% absolute bioavailability
  • Avoid: Grey-market oral testosterone

Priority 5: Monthly adherence preference

  • Recommended: Testosterone undecanoate IM (Nebido) 1000 mg Q10–14 weeks; ultra-long-acting
  • Avoid: None

Default: Conservative weekly SC

  • Testosterone cypionate or enanthate SC 50–100 mg/week
  • Avoid 200–400 mg biweekly IM (supraphysiologic peaks)

Rationale: Weekly or more frequent low-dose SC flattens peak-trough fluctuation vs. biweekly IM. Preferred for longevity-oriented patients who want stable physiologic levels.


Safety flag summary

FlagTriggerAction
HEMATOCRIT_CRITICAL>0.54Immediate clinical action; consider dose reduction or switch to transdermal
PHLEBOTOMY_REVIEW0.52–0.54Assess vol status, sleep apnea, hypoxia
E2_ELEVATED>40 pg/mLAssess gynecomastia, water retention; consider dose reduction
E2_LOW<15 pg/mLAssess E2 deficiency symptoms; bone loss risk
PSA_ELEVATED>4.0Urology referral; consider biopsy before continuing
BP_ELEVATED>140/90New FDA 2025 warning; evaluate and manage
AF_HISTORYPrior atrial fibrillationEnhanced vigilance; TRAVERSE showed higher AF rate with TRT

Blood pressure — FDA 2025 update

The FDA added a new blood pressure warning (February 2025) based on ABPM studies. Testosterone can increase blood pressure. Monitor BP at every visit. This applies to all formulations and routes of administration.


Drug interactions

DrugEffect
WarfarinPotentiates anticoagulant effect; 2–5× increase in warfarin dose may be needed
Insulin / sulfonylureasEnhanced insulin sensitivity → hypoglycemia risk; dose reduction may be needed
CorticosteroidsAdditive fluid retention risk
5α-reductase inhibitors (finasteride/dutasteride)Reduce DHT conversion → shunting toward E2 aromatization → increased E2