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Cross-sex hormonal treatment and body uneasiness in individuals with gender dysphoria

Authors :
Anna Gualerzi
Naika Ferruccio
Elisa Bandini
Alessandro Oppo
Egidia Fanni
Maria Cristina Meriggiola
Alessandra D. Fisher
Alessandra H. Rellini
Valdo Ricca
Chiara Manieri
Emmanuele A. Jannini
Giovanni Castellini
Mario Maggi
Laura Benni
Helen Casale
Fisher AD
Castellini G
Bandini E
Casale H
Fanni E
Benni L
Ferruccio N
Meriggiola MC
Manieri C
Gualerzi A
Jannini E
Oppo A
Ricca V
Maggi M
Rellini AH.
Source :
The journal of sexual medicine. 11(3)
Publication Year :
2013

Abstract

Introduction Cross‐sex hormonal treatment (CHT) used for gender dysphoria (GD) could by itself affect well‐being without the use of genital surgery; however, to date, there is a paucity of studies investigating the effects of CHT alone. Aims This study aimed to assess differences in body uneasiness and psychiatric symptoms between GD clients taking CHT and those not taking hormones (no CHT). A second aim was to assess whether length of CHT treatment and daily dose provided an explanation for levels of body uneasiness and psychiatric symptoms. Methods A consecutive series of 125 subjects meeting the criteria for GD who not had genital reassignment surgery were considered. Main Outcome Measures Subjects were asked to complete the Body Uneasiness Test (BUT) to explore different areas of body‐related psychopathology and the Symptom Checklist‐90 Revised (SCL‐90‐R) to measure psychological state. In addition, data on daily hormone dose and length of hormonal treatment (androgens, estrogens, and/or antiandrogens) were collected through an analysis of medical records. Results Among the male‐to‐female (MtF) individuals, those using CHT reported less body uneasiness compared with individuals in the no‐CHT group. No significant differences were observed between CHT and no‐CHT groups in the female‐to‐male (FtM) sample. Also, no significant differences in SCL score were observed with regard to gender (MtF vs. FtM), hormone treatment (CHT vs. no‐CHT), or the interaction of these two variables. Moreover, a two‐step hierarchical regression showed that cumulative dose of estradiol (daily dose of estradiol times days of treatment) and cumulative dose of androgen blockers (daily dose of androgen blockers times days of treatment) predicted BUT score even after controlling for age, gender role, cosmetic surgery, and BMI. Conclusions The differences observed between MtF and FtM individuals suggest that body‐related uneasiness associated with GD may be effectively diminished with the administration of CHT even without the use of genital surgery for MtF clients. A discussion is provided on the importance of controlling both length and daily dose of treatment for the most effective impact on body uneasiness. Fisher AD, Castellini G, Bandini E, Casale H, Fanni E, Benni L, Ferruccio N, Meriggiola MC, Manieri C, Gualerzi A, Jannini E, Oppo A, Ricca V, Maggi M, and Rellini AH. Cross‐sex hormonal treatment and body uneasiness in individuals with gender dysphoria. J Sex Med 2014;11:709–719.

Details

ISSN :
17436109
Volume :
11
Issue :
3
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The journal of sexual medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....9f001551e6ec0a5bd017e1fe6b7cfe1c