Antiandrogen or estradiol treatment or both during hormone therapy in transitioning transgender women

Publikation: Beiträge in ZeitschriftenÜbersichtsarbeitenForschung

Authors

  • Claudia Haupt
  • Miriam Henke
  • Alexia Kutschmar
  • Birgit Hauser
  • Sandra Baldinger
  • Sarah Rafaela Saenz
  • Gerhard Schreiber

Background: Gender dysphoria is described as a mismatch between an individual's experienced or expressed gender and their assigned gender, based on primary or secondary sexual characteristics. Gender dysphoria can be associated with clinically significant psychological distress and may result in a desire to change sexual characteristics. The process of adapting a person's sexual characteristics to their desired sex is called ‘transition.'. Current guidelines suggest hormonal and, if needed, surgical intervention to aid transition in transgender women, i.e. persons who aim to transition from male to female. In adults, hormone therapy aims to reverse the body's male attributes and to support the development of female attributes. It usually includes estradiol, antiandrogens, or a combination of both. Many individuals first receive hormone therapy alone, without surgical interventions. However, this is not always sufficient to change such attributes as facial bone structure, breasts, and genitalia, as desired. For these transgender women, surgery may then be used to support transition. Objectives: We aimed to assess the efficacy and safety of hormone therapy with antiandrogens, estradiol, or both, compared to each other or placebo, in transgender women in transition. Search methods: We searched MEDLINE, the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (CENTRAL), Embase, Biosis Preview, PsycINFO, and PSYNDEX. We carried out our final searches on 19 December 2019. Selection criteria: We aimed to include randomised controlled trials (RCTs), quasi-RCTs, and cohort studies that enrolled transgender women, age 16 years and over, in transition from male to female. Eligible studies investigated antiandrogen and estradiol hormone therapies alone or in combination, in comparison to another form of the active intervention, or placebo control. Data collection and analysis: We used standard methodological procedures expected by Cochrane to establish study eligibility. Main results: Our database searches identified 1057 references, and after removing duplicates we screened 787 of these. We checked 13 studies for eligibility at the full text screening stage. We excluded 12 studies and identified one as an ongoing study. We did not identify any completed studies that met our inclusion criteria. The single ongoing study is an RCT conducted in Thailand, comparing estradiol valerate plus cyproterone treatment with estradiol valerate plus spironolactone treatment. The primary outcome will be testosterone level at three month follow-up. Authors' conclusions: We found insufficient evidence to determine the efficacy or safety of hormonal treatment approaches for transgender women in transition. This lack of studies shows a gap between current clinical practice and clinical research. Robust RCTs and controlled cohort studies are needed to assess the benefits and harms of hormone therapy (used alone or in combination) for transgender women in transition. Studies should specifically focus on short-, medium-, and long-term adverse effects, quality of life, and participant satisfaction with the change in male to female body characteristics of antiandrogen and estradiol therapy alone, and in combination. They should also focus on the relative effects of these hormones when administered orally, transdermally, and intramuscularly. We will include non-controlled cohort studies in the next iteration of this review, as our review has shown that such studies provide the highest quality evidence currently available in the field. We will take into account methodological limitations when doing so.

OriginalspracheEnglisch
AufsatznummerCD013138
ZeitschriftCochrane Database of Systematic Reviews
Jahrgang2020
Ausgabenummer11
Anzahl der Seiten22
ISSN1361-6137
DOIs
PublikationsstatusErschienen - 28.11.2020
Extern publiziertJa

Bibliographische Notiz

Funding Information:
We would like to acknowledge the support of Dr. Jonathan Livingstone-Banks, Dr. Nicola Lindson, and Dr. Paul Aveyard from the Tobacco Addiction Group, as well as Dr. Erik von Elm from Cochrane Switzerland, whom we consulted in preparing this review. We greatly appreciate Dr. Alissa Jones Nelson’s support in reviewing the spelling and grammar of this review. We also gratefully acknowledge peer review comments from Igor Grabovac, Department of Social and Preventive Medicine, Centre for Public Health, Medical University of Vienna, Vienna, Austria and Dr. Barbara Nussbaumer-Streit, Cochrane Austria, Department for Evidence-based Medicine and Evaluation, Danube-University Krems, Krems, Austria, and consumer review comments from Sarah Stephenson-Hunter.

Publisher Copyright:
Copyright © 2020 The Cochrane Collaboration. Published by John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

DOI

Zuletzt angesehen

Publikationen

  1. Studienwahlmotive von Bewerberinnen und Bewerbern auf ein Lehramtsstudium und auf andere Studiengänge
  2. Food policy councils as loci for practising food democracy? Insights from the case of Oldenburg, Germany
  3. Classification of playing position in elite junior Australian football using technical skill indicators
  4. Contrasting changes in the abundance and diversity of North American bird assemblages from 1971 to 2010
  5. Metallurgical characterization of hot tearing curves recorded during solidification of magnesium alloys
  6. Enabling the identification of industrial symbiosis (IS) through information communication technology (ICT)
  7. How environmental and social orientations influence the funding success of investment-based crowdfunding
  8. Academic self-concept and causal attributions for success and failure amongst elementary school children
  9. Unobtrusive Detection of Respiratory Rate through UWB-Sensing for Applications of Ambient Assisted Living
  10. Overcoming Multi-legacy Application Challenges through Building Dynamic Capabilities for Low-Code Adoption
  11. Ein internetbasiertes Problemlösetraining zur Reduktion psychischer Beanspruchung bei belasteten Lehrern
  12. Neural Network-Based Finite-Time Control for Stochastic Nonlinear Systems with Input Dead-Zone and Saturation
  13. Age in the entrepreneurial process: The role of future time perspective and prior entrepreneurial experience
  14. Compressive creep behavior and microstructural evolution of sand-cast and peak-aged Mg–12Gd–0.4Zr alloy at 250 °C
  15. Nonlinear recurrence analysis of piezo sensor placement for unmanned aerial vehicle motor failure diagnosis
  16. Development and evaluation of Open Educational Resources to improve teacher's knowledge on spatial abilities