| Literature DB >> 36229533 |
Francisco Javier Martinez-Martin1,2, Agnieszka Kuzior3, Alba Hernandez-Lazaro4, Ricardo Jose de Leon-Durango4, Carlos Rios-Gomez4, Borja Santana-Ojeda4, Jennifer Maria Perez-Rivero5, Paula Maria Fernandez-Trujillo-Comenge4, Paula Gonzalez-Diaz6, Claudia Arnas-Leon4,3, Carmen Acosta-Calero7, Esperanza Perdomo-Herrera5, Alba Lucia Tocino-Hernandez5, Maria Del Sol Sanchez-Bacaicoa5, Maria Del Pino Perez-Garcia5.
Abstract
In order to assess the risk of hypertension development, we performed a retrospective analysis of the clinical records of consecutive transgender patients who began gender-affirming hormonal therapy in our Outpatient Gender Identity Clinic with <30 years of age and had a follow-up >5 years. 149 transgender women treated with estradiol and 153 transgender men treated with testosterone were included; 129 of the transgender women received also androgen blockers (54 spironolactone, 49 cyproterone acetate and 26 LHRH agonists). The annual incidence of hypertension in young transgender men (1.18%) seemed comparable to that of the general population. In young transgender women, it seemed higher (2.14%); we found that the choice of androgen blocker had a remarkable effect, with a highly significant increase in patients treated with cyproterone acetate (4.90%) vs. the rest (0.80%); the adjusted hazard-ratio was 0.227 (p = 0.001). Correlation, logistic regression and mediation analyses were performed for the associations of the available clinical variables with the increase in systolic blood pressure and the onset of hypertension, but besides the use of cyproterone acetate, only the ponderal gain was found significant (Spearman's r: 0.361, p < 0.001); with a 36.7% mediation effect (31.2-42.3%). Cyproterone acetate has additional known risks, such as meningioma; although we cannot conclusively prove that it has a role in the development of hypertension, we conclude that the use of cyproterone acetate for this indication should be reconsidered.Entities:
Keywords: Cyproterone acetate; Gender-affirming hormonal therapy; Hypertension incidence; Transgender people
Year: 2022 PMID: 36229533 DOI: 10.1038/s41440-022-01067-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hypertens Res ISSN: 0916-9636 Impact factor: 5.528