Testosterone Optimization Before TRT: The 6-Point Checklist

P
Protocol Team
· 13 min read

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Testosterone Optimization Before TRT: The 6-Point Checklist

Your testosterone came back low. Maybe it was 310 ng/dL on a morning blood draw. Maybe it was 280. Maybe you’ve been feeling it for months — the fatigue that sleep doesn’t fix, the libido that quietly disappeared, the gym sessions that stopped producing results. You Googled “low testosterone treatment,” and now you’re considering TRT.

Before you start testosterone replacement therapy, there’s a question worth answering: is your testosterone low because your body can’t produce it, or because something is suppressing production?

The distinction matters. If six identifiable, fixable factors are dragging your testosterone down, replacing the hormone without addressing them means you’ll need TRT indefinitely for a problem that may have been reversible. That’s not a failure of TRT — it’s a missed opportunity.

Protocol’s Hormonal Health protocol requires six lifestyle prerequisites to be verified before any TRT discussion. This isn’t gatekeeping. It’s the difference between treating a symptom and solving a problem. The checklist, why each item is on it, and what the evidence actually shows:

The 6 Prerequisites

1. Sleep: 7+ Hours Per Night for 4 Consecutive Weeks

Sleep is the most underrated testosterone killer.

Testosterone production follows a circadian rhythm. The majority of daily testosterone secretion happens during sleep — during deep sleep and REM specifically. A study from the University of Chicago found that restricting healthy young men to 5 hours of sleep per night for one week reduced daytime testosterone levels by 10-15%. That’s the equivalent of aging 10-15 years, produced in 7 days by sleep restriction alone.

The requirement: 7 or more hours of sleep per night for at least 4 consecutive weeks, verified by wearable data — an Oura ring, Apple Watch, Whoop, or similar device. Self-reported “I usually get 7 hours” doesn’t cut it. Wearable data shows actual sleep duration, not time in bed.

Why 4 weeks? Because testosterone responds to sustained sleep patterns, not a single good night. You need consistent recovery over weeks before the hormone system reflects the change.

What we see in practice: A meaningful percentage of men who present with testosterone in the 300-400 ng/dL range and documented poor sleep (under 6 hours, fragmented, or inconsistent timing) see testosterone increase by 50-100 ng/dL after 4-6 weeks of verified sleep improvement. Not all of them. But enough that testing without controlling for sleep produces unreliable data.

2. Body Composition: Address Excess Body Fat

Adipose tissue contains aromatase, the enzyme that converts testosterone to estradiol. More body fat means more aromatase activity, which means more testosterone gets converted to estrogen before it can circulate and do its job. This creates a self-reinforcing cycle: low testosterone promotes fat storage, fat storage suppresses testosterone.

The specific requirements depend on starting point:

  • BMI above 30: A minimum 5% body weight reduction attempted. For a 220-pound man, that’s 11 pounds. Not achieved — attempted, with documented effort over a reasonable timeframe. The metabolic shift that accompanies even modest fat loss begins changing the hormonal environment.
  • BMI 25-30: Active participation in Protocol’s body composition programming for at least 8 weeks, with documented engagement in resistance training and dietary protocols.

Why this matters beyond the aromatase effect: excess visceral fat increases inflammatory cytokines (IL-6, TNF-alpha) that directly suppress the hypothalamic-pituitary-gonadal axis — the signaling chain that tells your body to produce testosterone. Reducing visceral fat reduces that inflammatory suppression.

An honest framing: Not every man with a high BMI has suppressable testosterone. Some men at BMI 32 have genuinely low production that body composition changes won’t fix. But starting TRT without addressing body composition means you’re adding testosterone into an environment that’s actively converting it to estrogen. That leads to dose escalation, estradiol management problems, and suboptimal outcomes.

3. Alcohol: 14 or Fewer Drinks Per Week for 4 Weeks

Alcohol suppresses testosterone through multiple pathways. It directly damages Leydig cells (the testicular cells that produce testosterone). It increases aromatase activity. It disrupts the HPG axis signaling. It impairs liver function, which affects SHBG and hormone clearance. And it destroys sleep architecture — even when total sleep duration looks adequate, alcohol reduces deep sleep and REM sleep, the phases when testosterone production peaks.

The threshold: 14 or fewer standard drinks per week, maintained for at least 4 weeks before testosterone testing or TRT initiation. This is a moderate standard, not abstinence. But men who are drinking 20-30+ drinks per week and presenting with low testosterone need to reduce consumption before anyone can determine what their actual baseline production looks like.

What the data shows: Reducing heavy alcohol consumption (>21 drinks/week) to moderate levels typically produces measurable testosterone recovery within 4-8 weeks, assuming no permanent Leydig cell damage. The effect is most pronounced in men under 50.

4. Exercise: Meeting Minimum Standards for 4 Weeks

Resistance training acutely increases testosterone production. Regular resistance training also improves insulin sensitivity, reduces visceral fat, and increases lean mass — all of which support the hormonal environment that sustains testosterone production.

The minimum standards come from Protocol’s body composition programming:

  • Resistance training: 2-3 sessions per week, with progressive overload
  • Cardiovascular activity: 150+ minutes per week of zone 2 (conversational pace)

Four weeks of consistent exercise is enough to see measurable changes in body composition and insulin sensitivity, both of which affect testosterone. It also establishes whether the member can sustain the routine — because exercise is part of the TRT protocol too, not something you stop once hormones are prescribed.

Worth noting on the flip side: Overtraining can suppress testosterone. The men most at risk are endurance athletes training 10+ hours per week, especially with caloric restriction. If exercise volume is very high and recovery is inadequate, the answer might be less exercise and more recovery, not TRT.

5. Stress: Assessed and Addressed

Cortisol and testosterone exist in a roughly inverse relationship. Chronic stress elevates cortisol, which directly suppresses gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) at the hypothalamic level. That suppresses LH. That suppresses testosterone production. The cascade is well-documented.

The assessment has two tiers:

  • PSS-10 score in the normal range. The Perceived Stress Scale is a validated 10-question instrument that takes 3 minutes to complete. A normal score means acute stress is unlikely to be a primary driver of low testosterone.
  • If PSS-10 is elevated: 4-point salivary cortisol testing or DUTCH cortisol panel to objectively assess the cortisol pattern. Some men have normalized their subjective experience of stress while still running chronically elevated cortisol — the objective test catches this.

Why this matters for TRT specifically: Starting TRT in the presence of unaddressed chronic stress often produces disappointing results. The cortisol continues suppressing the HPG axis, and the exogenous testosterone gets partially offset by the same stress physiology that suppressed endogenous production. Addressing the stress first, or at minimum documenting it, gives both the clinician and the member realistic expectations.

6. Medication Review

Several common medication classes suppress testosterone or mimic symptoms of low testosterone:

  • Opioids: Directly suppress the HPG axis. Chronic opioid use causes hypogonadism in up to 90% of men.
  • Glucocorticoids (prednisone, etc.): Suppress gonadotropin secretion.
  • SSRIs: Can cause sexual dysfunction and fatigue that mimics low testosterone, even with normal testosterone levels.
  • Certain antidepressants and antipsychotics: Can elevate prolactin, which suppresses GnRH and LH.

A thorough medication review before TRT isn’t about stopping medications — it’s about understanding the pharmacological context. If an SSRI is causing the sexual dysfunction, adding testosterone won’t fix it. If chronic prednisone is suppressing the axis, the conversation is different than if there’s no medication-related cause.

This review is documented and discussed with the prescribing provider when relevant.

Two Tracks: Fast and Standard

Fast Track

All six prerequisites verified AND two morning fasting testosterone draws below 350 ng/dL (or free testosterone below age-adjusted range with symptoms): proceed directly to the physician encounter for TRT discussion. No additional waiting period.

Note the threshold: Protocol uses 350 ng/dL, not the Endocrine Society’s 300 ng/dL. This is a deliberate choice. At 300 ng/dL, many men have been symptomatic for years. At 350 ng/dL with verified lifestyle optimization and persistent symptoms, the clinical picture is clear enough to act.

Two draws are required because testosterone fluctuates day to day. A single low reading could reflect a bad night of sleep, acute illness, or normal variation. Two morning fasting draws — before 10 AM, after an overnight fast — that both come in low establish a reliable pattern.

Standard Track

One or more prerequisites not met: implement the relevant lifestyle changes, retest at 6-8 weeks. If testosterone normalizes, continue lifestyle-only with monitoring. If testosterone remains below 350 despite verified optimization, proceed to physician.

What we see on the standard track: A subset of men — those with multiple unaddressed prerequisites, especially poor sleep + high body fat + heavy alcohol use — see testosterone increase by 100-200 ng/dL after 6-8 weeks of lifestyle changes. Their “low testosterone” was a downstream effect of upstream problems. For these men, the checklist saved them from a lifelong prescription for a condition that was reversible.

For the rest — those whose testosterone stays low despite a solid foundation — the checklist did something equally useful: it confirmed that TRT is genuinely indicated, removed ambiguity, and set the foundation for the therapy to work as well as possible.

The TRT Protocol: What Protocol Prescribes

When the decision to proceed is made, Protocol follows a specific protocol:

First-line: Testosterone cypionate, 100 mg intramuscular weekly or 50 mg twice weekly. Twice-weekly dosing produces more stable blood levels with fewer peaks and troughs, which typically means fewer side effects and more consistent symptom improvement.

Not first-line: Testosterone pellets. Pellets are subcutaneous implants that slowly release testosterone over 3-4 months. The problem: once they’re in, the dose cannot be adjusted. If the dose is too high, you wait months for it to dissipate. If it’s too low, you’re underdosed for months. Injectable testosterone allows dose titration at every lab check.

Fertility preservation: If a man wants children now or in the future, TRT suppresses sperm production. hCG (human chorionic gonadotropin) at 500 IU subcutaneous twice weekly can maintain testicular function alongside TRT in uncomplicated cases. Complex fertility situations — long-term azoospermia, prior fertility treatments — are referred to a reproductive endocrinologist.

Estradiol management: Protocol does NOT prescribe aromatase inhibitors (anastrozole) prophylactically. Many TRT clinics add an AI from day one to prevent estrogen conversion. We don’t. Aromatase inhibitors lower estradiol, which men need for bone density, cardiovascular health, and sexual function. We only consider low-dose anastrozole (0.25-0.5 mg twice weekly) if estradiol rises above 50 pg/mL with symptoms — gynecomastia, significant water retention, mood changes. Asymptomatic estradiol of 45? Leave it alone. Estrogen is not the enemy.

Contraindications: When TRT Is Not Appropriate

TRT has clear exclusion criteria:

  • Hematocrit above 54%. Testosterone stimulates red blood cell production. Starting TRT with already-elevated hematocrit creates a dangerous blood thickening risk. Hematocrit must be below 54% at baseline and is monitored at every follow-up.
  • Untreated severe obstructive sleep apnea. Sleep apnea must be treated first — it independently suppresses testosterone AND raises hematocrit. Starting TRT without treating sleep apnea compounds both problems.
  • Active prostate or breast cancer. Exogenous testosterone is contraindicated in the presence of active hormone-sensitive malignancy.
  • Active desire for fertility without a concurrent plan. TRT alone suppresses sperm production. If fertility is desired, hCG or clomiphene must be part of the plan, or TRT is deferred.

These are not relative contraindications — they are reasons to stop, investigate, and resolve before considering TRT.

Monitoring: What Gets Tracked

Once TRT is initiated, Protocol monitors at specific intervals:

6-8 weeks post-initiation:

  • Total and free testosterone (confirming therapeutic levels)
  • Estradiol (watching for excessive conversion)
  • Hematocrit (ensuring no dangerous elevation)
  • PSA (baseline for prostate safety monitoring)
  • Hepatic panel
  • Symptom assessment via validated questionnaire (qADAM)

6 months, 12 months, and annually thereafter:

  • Full panel repeat
  • Lipid profile
  • Symptom reassessment
  • Hematocrit at every draw — if it exceeds 54%, TRT is held, therapeutic phlebotomy is performed, and the dose is reduced upon resumption

PSA velocity is tracked longitudinally. An increase of more than 0.75 ng/mL per year or an absolute value above 4.0 triggers a urology referral and TRT hold. This is not because TRT causes prostate cancer — the evidence does not support that claim — but because monitoring for prostate changes is a responsible part of any testosterone management program.

The Women’s Companion: HRT Prerequisites

Protocol applies the same 6-prerequisite framework to female hormone replacement therapy — the same lifestyle factors that suppress testosterone in men also interfere with estrogen, progesterone, and testosterone metabolism in women. The details differ (transdermal estradiol first-line, progesterone requirements, DUTCH metabolism testing), but the principle is identical: build the foundation first. Read the full framework: The HRT Decision: Lifestyle Prerequisites Most Doctors Skip.

For women interested in testosterone optimization specifically, see Testosterone in Women: What the Evidence Actually Shows.

Where This Leaves You

TRT is a legitimate, effective treatment for men with genuinely low testosterone who’ve addressed the reversible causes first. The checklist isn’t designed to talk you out of TRT. It’s designed to make sure that if you start, you start for the right reasons, on the right foundation, with the right monitoring.

Six items. Sleep. Body fat. Alcohol. Exercise. Stress. Medications. Address all six, test twice, and if testosterone is still below 350 ng/dL with symptoms — the clinical picture is unambiguous. Proceed with confidence.

Skip the checklist, and you’re guessing. Maybe the TRT was necessary. Maybe the sleep apnea you didn’t know about was suppressing your production. Maybe the 22 drinks a week were the primary cause. You’ll never know, and you’ll be on injections for the rest of your life wondering if you needed to be.

The 6-8 weeks it takes to verify the checklist is a small investment relative to a lifelong prescription. Either you fix the problem and avoid TRT, or you confirm it’s genuinely indicated and build the foundation that makes TRT work better. Both outcomes are worth the time.


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