| Literature DB >> 29159296 |
Emilie K Johnson1,2,3, Courtney Finlayson4,5.
Abstract
Gender and sex diverse individuals-transgender individuals and those with disorders of sex development (DSD)-both face medical treatments that may impair biological fertility potential. Young DSD patients also often have abnormal gonadal development. Fertility preservation for these populations has historically been poorly understood and rarely addressed. Future fertility should be discussed with gender and sex diverse individuals, particularly given recent advances in fertility preservation technologies and evolving views of fertility potential. Key ethical issues include parental proxy decision-making and uncertainty regarding prepubertal fertility preservation technologies. Many opportunities exist for advancing fertility-related care and research for transgender and DSD patients.Entities:
Keywords: disorders of sex development; fertility preservation; gender dysphoria; transgender
Year: 2016 PMID: 29159296 PMCID: PMC5685253 DOI: 10.1089/trgh.2015.0010
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Transgend Health ISSN: 2380-193X
Current Fertility Preservation Options
| Gamete type | Pre- or peripubertal options | Postpubertal options |
|---|---|---|
| Oocyte | Ovarian tissue cryopreservation[ | Ovarian stimulation, with oocyte retrieval and cryopreservation of oocyte or embryo |
| Spermatozoa | Testicular tissue cryopreservation[ | Sperm banking, with sample obtained through masturbation or surgical biopsy |
Experimental.
DSD Fertility Effects, Research Needs, and Fertility Preservation Techniques
| Characteristic | Fertility effect | Research needs | Applicable fertility preservation technique |
|---|---|---|---|
| Abnormal gonads (streak, dysgenetic) | Congenital and/or progressive gonadal failure | Establish presence and quality of germ cells by age | Cryopreserve testicular or ovarian tissue[ |
| Risk of gonadal malignancy | Gonadectomy traditionally performed | -Malignancy risk-stratification by condition | If gonadectomy required |
| Abnormal hormone production | Abnormal sperm and oocyte production | Determine fertility rates | Existing assisted reproductive techniques: ovarian stimulation, testicular sperm extraction |
| Discordance between gender identity and germ cell type | Reframing view allows for biological fertility potential | Patient/parent perspectives needed | N/A |
Experimental.
DSD, disorders of sex development.
Comparison of Fertility-Related Issues for Individuals with Transgender Versus DSD Conditions
| Transgender | DSD | |
|---|---|---|
| Inherent gonadal abnormality | No | Frequent |
| Medical treatments leading to infertility | Frequent | Infrequent |
| Surgical treatments leading to infertility | Generally only in adulthood | Frequent in childhood |
| Parental proxy decision-making | Yes | Yes |
| Medically “unnecessary” surgery for pre- or peripubertal fertility preservation | Yes | Rare |
| Concern about transmission of a genetic condition | No more than the general population | Yes |
| Gonadal type discordant with gender identity | Always | Sometimes |