| Literature DB >> 32272482 |
Claas Flint1,2, Katharina Förster1, Sophie A Koser1, Carsten Konrad3, Pienie Zwitserlood4, Klaus Berger5, Marco Hermesdorf5, Tilo Kircher6, Igor Nenadic6, Axel Krug6, Bernhard T Baune1,7,8, Katharina Dohm1, Ronny Redlich1, Nils Opel1, Volker Arolt1, Tim Hahn1, Xiaoyi Jiang2, Udo Dannlowski9, Dominik Grotegerd1.
Abstract
Transgender individuals (TIs) show brain-structural alterations that differ from their biological sex as well as their perceived gender. To substantiate evidence that the brain structure of TIs differs from male and female, we use a combined multivariate and univariate approach. Gray matter segments resulting from voxel-based morphometry preprocessing of N = 1753 cisgender (CG) healthy participants were used to train (N = 1402) and validate (20% holdout N = 351) a support-vector machine classifying the biological sex. As a second validation, we classified N = 1104 patients with depression. A third validation was performed using the matched CG sample of the transgender women (TW) application sample. Subsequently, the classifier was applied to N = 26 TW. Finally, we compared brain volumes of CG-men, women, and TW-pre/post treatment cross-sex hormone treatment (CHT) in a univariate analysis controlling for sexual orientation, age, and total brain volume. The application of our biological sex classifier to the transgender sample resulted in a significantly lower true positive rate (TPR-male = 56.0%). The TPR did not differ between CG-individuals with (TPR-male = 86.9%) and without depression (TPR-male = 88.5%). The univariate analysis of the transgender application-sample revealed that TW-pre/post treatment show brain-structural differences from CG-women and CG-men in the putamen and insula, as well as the whole-brain analysis. Our results support the hypothesis that brain structure in TW differs from brain structure of their biological sex (male) as well as their perceived gender (female). This finding substantiates evidence that TIs show specific brain-structural alterations leading to a different pattern of brain structure than CG-individuals.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32272482 PMCID: PMC7419542 DOI: 10.1038/s41386-020-0666-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neuropsychopharmacology ISSN: 0893-133X Impact factor: 7.853
Fig. 1Application of the trained classifier for biological sex prediction.
CG cisgender, TW transgender women, MDD major depressive disorder.
Results of the validation set (N = 351; Nmale = 148; Nfemale = 203).
| Groups | Actual | |
|---|---|---|
| Female | Male | |
| Predicted | ||
| Female | 202 (TPR = 99.9%) | 17 (TNR = 11.5%) |
| Male | 1 (TNR = 0.1%) | 131 (TPR = 88.5%) |
| Related metrics: | ||
| Accuracy: 94.87% | ||
| Balanced accuracy: 94.01% | ||
| Precision: 99.24% | ||
| Recall: 88.51% | ||
| F1-score: 0.9357 | ||
Classification results in absolute numbers and percentage of accurately identified biological sex.
TPR true positive rate (sensitivity), TNR true negative rate (specificity).
Using a Fisher’s exact test the TPR CG-women was significantly increased in comparison to CG-men p < 0.001.
Results of the second validation set (N = 1404; Nmale = 551; Nfemale = 853).
| Groups | Actual | |
|---|---|---|
| Female | Male | |
| Predicted | ||
| Female | 829 (TPR = 97.2%) | 72 (TNR = 13.1%) |
| Male | 24 (TNR = 2.8%) | 479 (TPR = 86.9%) |
| Related metrics: | ||
| Accuracy: 93.16% | ||
| Balanced accuracy: 92.06% | ||
| Precision: 95.23% | ||
| Recall: 86.93% | ||
| F1-score: 0.9206 | ||
Classification results in absolute numbers and percentage of accurately identified biological sex.
TPR true positive rate (sensitivity), TNR true negative rate (specificity).
Results of the application set (N = 60; Ncg_men = 15; Ncg_women = 19; NTW = 26).
| Groups | Actual | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| CG women | CG men | TW | |
| Predicted | |||
| Female | 19 (TPR = 100.0%) | 1 (TNR = 6.7%) | 10 (TNR = 38.5%) |
| Male | 0 (TNR = 0.0%) | 14 (TPR = 93.3%) | 16 (TPR = 61.5%) |
| The following metrics are related to the CG groups only: | |||
| Accuracy: 94.12% | |||
| Balanced accuracy: 96.67% | |||
| F1-score: 0.9655 | |||
Classification results in absolute numbers percentage of accurately identified biological sex.
CG cisgender, TW transgender women, TPR true positive rate (sensitivity), TNR true negative rate (specificity).
Classification results in the application sample.
| Group | TPR in % ( | Fisher’s exact test against CG men | |
|---|---|---|---|
| CG women | 19 | 100.00% (19/19) | |
| CG men | 15 | 93.33% (14/15) | – |
| TW | 26 | 61.54% (16/26) | |
| TW (treatment naive) | 8 | 87.50% (7/8) | |
| TW (post-CHT) | 18 | 50.00 % (9/18) |
Classification results in percentage of true positive rate identified biological sex.
TPR true positive rate (sensitivity), cg cisgender, TW transgender women, CHT cross-sex-hormone treatment.
***indicates significance of the Fisher’s Z-Test (p < 0.05).
Fig. 2Box plot for the predicted probabilities of male sex based on the application-sample and the third validation-sample, including transgender and cisgender individuals.
CG cisgender, TW transgender women.
Results of the univariate gray matter region of interest analysis of the insula and putamen.
| Compared groups | Region of interest | Side | TFCE | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| TW-pre > TW-post | Insula | L | 91.50 | 0.012 | 76 | −38 | −3 | −12 |
| R | 54.96 | 0.033 | 23 | 32 | 10 | −16 | ||
| Putamen | L | 466.55 | <0.001 | 2005 | −21 | 16 | 8 | |
| R | 395.31 | <0.001 | 1409 | 27 | −8 | 15 | ||
| TW-pre > CG-women | Insula | L | 63.21 | <0.001 | 1926 | −39 | −3 | −12 |
| R | 52.58 | <0.001 | 2299 | 34 | 15 | −10 | ||
| Putamen | L | 274.31 | <0.001 | 2381 | −21 | 10 | 12 | |
| R | 257.58 | <0.001 | 2316 | 26 | −4 | 14 | ||
| TW-pre > CG-men | Putamen | L | 203.55 | <0.001 | 892 | −21 | 15 | 9 |
| R | 183.13 | <0.001 | 576 | 28 | −3 | 15 | ||
| TW-post < CG-men | Putamen | L | 100.64 | 0.001 | 1050 | −14 | 9 | −2 |
| R | 70.60 | 0.001 | 1429 | 26 | 4 | −8 | ||
| Insula | L | 38.69 | 0.005 | 303 | −42 | 14 | −6 | |
| L | 30.99 | 0.010 | 124 | −42 | −8 | 4 | ||
| R | 21.37 | 0.001 | 131 | 30 | −18 | 20 | ||
| TW-post < CG-women | Insula | R | 114.58 | 0.021 | 99 | 34 | −15 | 9 |
| CGM > CG-women | Insula | R | 109.23 | <0.001 | 1789 | 39 | 16 | 3 |
| L | 49.7 | <0.001 | 1199 | −44 | 14 | −8 | ||
| L | 13.07 | 0.004 | 48 | −44 | −14 | 8 | ||
| Putamen | R | 100.11 | <0.001 | 1972 | 27 | 6 | −4 | |
| L | 81.13 | <0.001 | 1509 | −26 | −4 | −3 |
Table reports respective statistics of significant clusters of the group comparisons between transgender and cisgender individuals. Clusters resulted from group comparisons corrected for total intracranial volume, age, and sexual orientation.
For reasons of brevity no results below a threshold of k = 22 voxel have been reported.
TW transgender women, Cg cisgender, pre before hormone treatment, post after hormone treatment, L left, R right, k cluster size, dF degrees of freedom, TFCE threshold-free-cluster-enhancement with subsequent family-wise-error-correction. Coordinates are reported according to MNI-space.
Fig. 3Significant results of the univariate gray matter analysis.
Color-bar represents t-values of the extracted clusters. Image shows the cluster at the respective peak voxel as reported in Table 3. a Alterations of the insula between groups (cisgender men, cisgender women, and transgender women before vs. after hormone treatment). b Alterations of the putamen between groups (cisgender men, cisgender women, and transgender women before vs. after hormone treatment) CG cisgender, TW transgender women, pre-CHT before cross-sex-hormone treatment, post-CHT after cross-sex-hormone treatment.