| Literature DB >> 33987305 |
Daniel Boczar1, Maria T Huayllani1, Humza Y Saleem2, Gabriela Cinotto1, Francisco R Avila1, Salam Kassis3, Xiaona Lu4, Brian D Rinker1, Antonio J Forte1.
Abstract
Gender confirmation surgery has a crucial role among transgender individuals. Phalloplasty is a procedure that uses flaps for phallic shaft creation. Flaps can be classified in free flaps or pedicle flaps and can be obtained from different donor sites such as forearm, thigh, abdomen, groin, and leg, and upper back. We conducted a systematic review about surgical flaps for phallic shaft creation in transgender patients. A systematic review was conducted on PubMed/MEDLINE, Cochrane Clinical Answers, and Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials databases without timeframe limitations. Exclusion criteria included articles that reported phalloplasty on patients other than transgender, as well as other surgical techniques such as urethroplasty, vaginectomy, hysterectomy and studies focused on psychosocial outcomes. Two hundred twenty-eight potential articles were identified in the initial search. Forty-one studies fulfilled the inclusion and exclusion criteria. Surgical flaps for phallic shaft creation in transgender patients were reported on 1,391 cases. Microsurgical flaps were the most common (24 of 33). The flap technique most frequently described was radial forearm flap (15 of 33) followed by Anterolateral thigh flap (7 of 33), Latissimus dorsi flap (5 of 33), abdominal flap (4 of 33), fibular flap (3 of 33), and groin flaps (3 of 33). The literature on surgical flaps for phallic shaft creation in transgender patients reflected how challenging the reconstruction of the phallus is. In summary, there is no universal choice of flap that could be applied to every patient. Therefore, the surgical approach must be chosen considering surgeon experience, physical examination, and patient desire. We hope this review supports future studies on surgical flaps for phallic shaft creation in transgender patients. 2021 Annals of Translational Medicine. All rights reserved.Entities:
Keywords: Sex reassignment surgery; surgical flaps; transsexualism
Year: 2021 PMID: 33987305 PMCID: PMC8105791 DOI: 10.21037/atm-20-3527
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ann Transl Med ISSN: 2305-5839