| Literature DB >> 28111635 |
Courtney Finlayson1, Emilie K Johnson2, Diane Chen3, Elizabeth Dabrowski4, Yasmin Gosiengfiao5, Lisa Campo-Engelstein6, Ilina Rosoklija7, Jill Jacobson8, Margarett Shnorhavorian9, Mary Ellen Pavone10, Molly B Moravek11, Herbert J Bonifacio12, Lisa Simons13, Janella Hudson14, Patricia Y Fechner15, Veronica Gomez-Lobo16, Rachel Kadakia4, Angela Shurba7, Erin Rowell17, Teresa K Woodruff10.
Abstract
Children and adolescents with gender and sex diversity include (1) gender-nonconforming and transgender individuals for whom gender identity or expression are incongruent with birth-assigned sex (heretofore, transgender) and (2) individuals who have differences in sex development (DSD). Although these are largely disparate groups, there is overlap in the medical expertise necessary to care for individuals with both gender and sex diversity. In addition, both groups face potential infertility or sterility as a result of desired medical and surgical therapies. The Ann & Robert H. Lurie Children's Hospital of Chicago (Lurie Children's) gender and sex development program (GSDP) provides specialized multidisciplinary care for both transgender and DSD patients. In response to patient concerns that recommended medical treatments have the potential to affect fertility, the Lurie Children's GSDP team partnered with experts from the Oncofertility Consortium at Northwestern University to expand fertility preservation options to gender and sex diverse youth. This article summarizes the results of a meeting of experts across this field at the annual Oncofertility Consortium conference with thoughts on next steps toward a unified protocol for this patient group.Entities:
Keywords: disorders of sex development; fertility; gender dysphoria; intersex; transgender
Year: 2016 PMID: 28111635 PMCID: PMC5243122 DOI: 10.1089/trgh.2016.0008
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Transgend Health ISSN: 2380-193X

Transgender fertility preservation scenarios.

DSD fertility preservation scenarios. DSD, differences in sex development.

Spermatogenesis and oogenesis.
Team Approach to Fertility Preservation
| Discipline | Role on fertility preservation team |
|---|---|
| Psychology/social work | Facilitate discussion of desire for biological fertility. Assess individual's capacity for medical decision-making, family dynamics, and transgenerational desire for fertility. Provide support for individuals struggling to cope with potential infertility. |
| Endocrinology | Assess gonadal function and likelihood of biological fertility potential. Discuss fertility-related implications of medical transition treatments in transgender youth. |
| Adolescent medicine | Discuss fertility-related implications of medical transition treatments in transgender youth. |
| Urology | Counsel about sperm preservation. Perform testicular biopsy, TESE. Assess internal anatomy and constitution of gonadal tissue. Perform gonadal biopsy or gonadectomy. |
| Pediatric surgery | Assess internal anatomy and constitution of gonadal tissue. Perform gonadal biopsy or gonadectomy. |
| Obstetrics/gynecology | Assess internal anatomy and constitution of gonadal tissue. Perform gonadal biopsy or gonadectomy. |
| Reproductive endocrinology | Counsel about and perform ovarian stimulation and oocyte retrieval. |
| Ethics | Evaluate individual's ability to assent/consent. “Arbitrate” in situations, in which parents and youth may disagree on decisions for fertility preservation. |
| Financial counseling | Discuss financial implications of procedures and storage, often not included in insurance coverage. |
| Genetic counseling | Discuss risks of transmission of condition to offspring and role of preimplantation genetics. |
| Fundamental reproductive science | Develop new technologies for measuring fertility loss and restoring endocrine and fertility in high-risk cases. |
TESE, testicular sperm extraction.
Cost of FP Techniques: Experience of Lurie Children's Hospital Oncofertility Team
| Technique | Cost | Insurance coverage |
|---|---|---|
| Oocyte cryopreservation | $5000–$10,000 | No |
| Ovarian tissue cryopreservation[ | $9000–$20,000 | Variable |
| Semen analysis | $375 | Usually |
| Freezing semen | $350 | No |
| TESE | $8000 | Variable |
| Testicular tissue Cryopreservation[ | $5500 | Usually |
| Infectious disease testing | $240 | Yes |
| Shipping to storage facility | $215 | No |
| Yearly storage | $275 ($75 discount based on financial need) | No |
Experimental.
Action Items for the Gender and Sex Diverse Working Group
| Immediate action items |
| Initiate a formal review of the bioethical concerns in each population. Of particular importance is the need to address the ethical concerns related to the experimental nature of some techniques to preserve fertility potential and the lack of data about fertility potential in these patients. |
| Invite patient advocates from each community to join the working group and provide their crucial perspective. |
| Build transgender and DSD fertility information into the current Oncofertility website. |
| Long-term research needed to advance the field |
| Multicenter extension of ongoing Lurie study to determine the presence and quality of germ cells in gonads of patients with disorders in sex development. |
| Study gonads in adult transgender patients undergoing sex reassignment surgery to evaluate the effect of hormone treatment on gonadal function and fertility. |
| Qualitative study to determine attitudes toward fertility in patients with complete androgen insensitivity syndrome, with a focus on discordance between gonadal type and gender identity. |
| Multicenter trials to preserve gonadal tissue and potential fertility in prepubertal gender and sex diverse individuals. |
DSD, differences in sex development.