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Transgender patients on hormone therapy require monitoring


 

– Transgender patients on hormone therapy have an increased mortality risk and so must be closely monitored, especially in terms of cardiovascular health and oncology, reported Marie D’Assigny, MD, of the department of endocrinology, diabetes, and dietetics at Poitiers (France) University Hospital, at the Infogyn 2022 conference. Because transgender women (those assigned male at birth who have assumed a female gender identity) are at risk of breast cancer, they should also be recommended for breast cancer screening.

Transgender men and women, especially transgender women, “should be deemed high-risk cardiovascular patients, or even very high risk in some cases,” said Dr. D’Assigny. This means that they should be considered candidates for cholesterol-lowering medication earlier than their cisgender counterparts, and a target LDL cholesterol of less than 0.70 g/L (70 mg/dL) should be sought. Likewise, blood pressure must be strictly monitored, especially because it tends to rise when on hormone therapy.

Feminizing hormone therapy requires chemical castration with the use of anti-androgen drugs to achieve a blood testosterone level less than 0.5 ng/mL (1.73 nmol/L). Low-dose cyproterone acetate (< 25 to 50 mg/day) is usually used. Treatment is stopped if a patient undergoes an orchidectomy. For feminizing hormone therapy, administration of 17beta-estradiol transcutaneously (patch or gel) is recommended, because it is associated with a lower risk of thromboembolism than oral administration.

Masculinizing hormone therapy is based on administration of progestogens, then testosterone in the form of an injection (mostly testosterone enanthate via intramuscular injection every 10 days) or percutaneously (gel or patch). There are few contraindications, and treatment is generally well tolerated.

High mortality rate

A recent retrospective study highlighted the mortality and risk factors for death in transgender men and women receiving hormone therapy. More than 4,500 people, mostly male to female transgender women, were enrolled in this study, which was conducted over a 47-year period (1972-2018) at a specialist clinic at Amsterdam UMC.

Over the course of the study, the mortality rate in transgender men and women was twice that of the general population. The death rate was 10.8% in transgender women vs. 2.7% in transgender men, after a follow-up of 40,232 person-years and 17,285 person-years, respectively. In transgender women, mortality was nearly three times that of cisgender women in the general population.

Over the nearly 5 decades of study, there was no improvement in the mortality rate, even over the last 10 years when transgender issues started to be more recognized. The mortality trends are markedly distinct over the years from those observed in the cisgender population, and this is especially true for transgender women compared to transgender men. “Much is still to be done,” said Dr. D’Assigny.

According to the study, cause-specific mortality in transgender women was high for cardiovascular disease and lung cancer, possibly because of a higher smoking rate in this population. HIV-related disease and suicide remained very high in both transgender men and women.

People with gender dysphoria who do not receive treatment for gender reassignment have a suicide rate of 40%, reported François-Xavier Madec, MD, of Foch Hospital in Suresnes, France, at a previous presentation. For transgender men and women who receive care, this rate is lowered to 15%, which is still significantly higher than the rate of 1.6% observed in the general population.

“These causes of death don’t give any indication as to a specific effect of hormone treatment but show that monitoring and, if necessary, treatment of comorbidities and lifestyle-related factors are important in managing transgender patients,” said the study authors.

“Strengthening social acceptance and treating cardiovascular risk factors could also help to reduce mortality in transgender men and women,” they added.

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