| Literature DB >> 32469193 |
Suely de Sousa Resende1, Vitor Hugo Kussumoto1, Flávia Harumi Cardoso Arima1, Priscila Cristine Krul1, Norma Cléa Mesquita Rodovalho1, Maria Risalva de Jesus Sampaio1, Mayara Muneishi Alves1.
Abstract
Transgender men are individuals who identify as men but were assigned female at birth. Gender-affirming medications include testosterone hormone therapy, known for its diverse effects throughout the body, which include endometrial atrophy and the induction of amenorrhea by suppressing ovulation, without however affecting the ovarian follicle pool. This paper reports the first case in Brazil involving a transgender man and a cisgender woman attempting to form a family. A 34-year-old transgender man and a 28-year-old woman came to our assisted reproduction service. He had been on testosterone for two years. At their initial consultation, testosterone therapy was discontinued. Controlled ovarian stimulation for the transgender man was achieved using a combination of recombinant gonadotropins FSH and LH. Pituitary blockage was performed using a GnRH antagonist protocol. Twenty follicles were aspirated and 16 oocytes were retrieved, 12 of which mature. They were inseminated with donor semen. On the fifth day of development, one high quality blastocyst was transferred to the cisgender woman, resulting in an ongoing pregnancy. Five supernumerary embryos were cryopreserved. Controlled ovarian stimulation with high quality oocytes, high quality embryos, and clinical pregnancy are possible for transgender men, even with a history of testosterone use.Entities:
Keywords: assisted reproduction; fertility; pregnancy; transgender men
Year: 2020 PMID: 32469193 PMCID: PMC7558884 DOI: 10.5935/1518-0557.20200024
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JBRA Assist Reprod ISSN: 1517-5693