| Literature DB >> 29392096 |
Emily B Sonnenblick1, Ami D Shah1, Zil Goldstein2, Tamar Reisman3.
Abstract
PURPOSE: This review will inform radiologists about the evidence base regarding radiographic imaging for transgender individuals and considerations for providing culturally sensitive care for this population.Entities:
Keywords: Breast; Mammography; Screening; Transgender; Transsexual
Year: 2018 PMID: 29392096 PMCID: PMC5773616 DOI: 10.1007/s40134-018-0260-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Radiol Rep ISSN: 2167-4825
Definitions/Terminology
| Term | Definition |
|---|---|
| Gender identity | Arises from an individual’s internal sense of being male or female or something else |
| Transgender | Adjective to describe an individual whose gender does not align with that assigned to them at birth |
| Transgender woman | A person who was assigned male sex at birth and identifies as female |
| Transgender man | A person who was assigned female sex at birth and identifies as male |
| Transition | Refers to steps taken to alter outward appearance to align with gender identity |
| Gender reassignment | Refers to steps taken to permanently alter one’s phenotype and can be achieved by hormone treatment and surgery |
| Cisgender or non-transgender | Adjectives to describe a person whose gender and gender expression aligns with that assigned to them at birth |
Fig. 1A 61-year-old transgender woman treated with estradiol and spironolactone for over 10 years. Standard CC and MLO views from her screening mammogram show normal heterogeneously dense breasts
Fig. 2Histology from the breast of a 55-year-old transgender woman treated with cross-sex hormones since age 19. a Lobule formation (H and E stain at ×100 magnification). b Pseudolactational changes (H and E stain at ×200 magnification)
Fig. 3A 57-year-old transgender woman treated with estrogen for 37 years. a Left breast mammogram shows extremely dense breast tissue containing a group of calcifications (circled). b Magnified view shows pleomorphic calcifications. c Histopathology from stereotactic biopsy shows tangential section of epithelial lined cystic ducts in fibrous stroma (H and E stain 400X). Findings are consistent with fibrocystic changes
Fig. 4A 58-year-old transgender woman on hormone treatment complains of lumps in her breast. a CC and MLO mammography views show triangle-shaped skin markers over palpable masses. b Ultrasound shows benign duct ectasia which correlates with the palpable masses
Fig. 5A 60-year-old transgender woman with free silicone injections feels a lump. a Mammogram shows multiple high-density masses which are silicone granulomas. The palpable granuloma is designated by blue arrow. b Ultrasound shows the palpable silicone granuloma is a circumscribed anechoic mass (arrow). c The silicone granuloma is a very high signal circumscribed mass on MRI T2 STIR sequence (arrow). d On a TI post-contrast sequence the silicone granuloma is a non-enhancing circumscribed mass (arrow)
Fig. 6A 54-year-old transgender woman is referred for a screening mammography prior to nipple sparing mastectomy to remove painful masses caused by free silicone. a Tomosynthesis shows bilateral large dense masses which are inseparable from the pectoralis muscle (arrows). There are also innumerable small silicone granulomas. b Ultrasound shows an example of the indistinct hyperechoic “snow storm” appearance of free silicone at posterior depth in both breasts (arrows). c Post-contrast subtracted MRI image shows no suspicious enhancing mass
Fig. 7Chest wall migration of mineral oil incidentally seen on a CT scan in a 41-year-old transgender woman with a history of breast augmentation with free mineral oil self-injections (arrows)
Breast cancer risk and screening recommendations
| Group | Lifetime risk for breast cancer | Suggested ages to start mammography per various guidelines | Interval | Note |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cisgender women at average risk | 12% | Age 40 [ | Annual [ | Recommendations on age to start and interval varies across organizations |
| Cisgender men at average risk | 0.1% | N/A | N/A | |
| Transgender women on at least 5 years of hormone treatment | Slightly higher than cisgender men | 50 [ | Biennial [ | Consider additional risk factors: BMI > 35, family history of breast cancer [ |
| Transgender men without mastectomy (no “top surgery”) | 12% | Same recommendation as cisgender women [ | Annual | Risk may vary with hormone treatment or oophorectomy |
| Klinefelter’s syndrome [ | 3–7.5% | N/A | N/A | Consider annual clinical breast exam (CBE) at age 35 [ |
| Transgender men post top surgery on hormone treatment | Slightly higher than cisgender male | N/A | N/A | Chest awareness. |
| Cisgender men w BRCA2 gene mutation [ | 5–7% | N/A | N/A | Breast awareness. Annual CBE at age 35 [ |
| Cisgender men w BRCA1 gene mutation [ | 1.2% | N/A | N/A | |
| Cisgender women w BRCA 1 or 2 gene mutation [ | 26–91% (> 20%) | Age 25 | Annual | Annual CBE at age 25 [ |