Jonathan D. Vignali’s research while affiliated with Walter Reed Army Institute of Research and other places

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Publications (1)


Summary of case reports.
Cont.
Summary of clinical trials.
Systematic Review of Safety of Selective Androgen Receptor Modulators in Healthy Adults: Implications for Recreational Users
  • Literature Review
  • Full-text available

May 2023

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198 Reads

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24 Citations

Jonathan D. Vignali

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Kevin C. Pak

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Daniel J. Selig

Selective Androgen Receptor Modulators (SARMs) are not FDA approved, and obtaining SARMs for personal use is illegal. Nevertheless, SARM use is increasingly popular amongst recreational athletes. Recent case reports of drug-induced liver injury (DILI) and tendon rupture raise serious concerns for the safety of recreational SARM users. On 10 November 2022 PubMed, Scopus, Web of Science, and ClinicalTrials.gov were searched for studies that reported safety data of SARMs. A multi-tiered screening approach was utilized, and any study or case report of generally healthy individuals exposed to any SARM was included. Thirty-three studies were included in the review with 15 case reports or case series and 18 clinical trials (total patients N = 2136 patients, exposed to SARM N = 1447). There were case reports of drug-induced liver injury (DILI) (N = 15), Achilles tendon rupture (N = 1), rhabdomyolysis (N = 1), and mild reversible liver enzyme elevation (N = 1). Elevated alanine aminotransferase (ALT) was commonly reported in clinical trials in patients exposed to SARM (mean 7.1% across trials). Two individuals exposed to GSK2881078 in a clinical trial were reported to have rhabdomyolysis. Recreational SARM use should be strongly discouraged, and the risks of DILI, rhabdomyolysis, and tendon rupture should be emphasized. However, despite warnings, if a patient refuses to discontinue SARM use, ALT monitoring or dose reduction may improve early detection and prevention of DILI.

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Citations (1)


... The authors are unaware of any previous systematic review directly pertaining to SARM use in athletes. Previous reviews have focused on SARM pharmacology, 55 adverse events, 87 and clinical applications in nonathlete patients with endocrinopathies or other hormonal/metabolic disorders. 22 Thus, this study aimed to provide a comprehensive synthesis of the literature on athlete-consumed SARMs to help sports medicine clinicians better understand the clinical effects, treatment protocols, detection methods, prevalence, and contamination concerns associated with these novel anabolic compounds. ...

Reference:

Athlete Selective Androgen Receptor Modulators Abuse: A Systematic Review
Systematic Review of Safety of Selective Androgen Receptor Modulators in Healthy Adults: Implications for Recreational Users