| Literature DB >> 36237602 |
Christina Huang1, Sarah Gold1, Rakan Radi1, Seth Amos1, Howa Yeung1,2.
Abstract
Transgender adolescents seek gender-affirming medical care to address gender identity and incongruence. Improved understanding of the dermatologic impact of gender-affirming medical care such as pubertal suppression, hormone therapy, and surgeries can enhance patient outcome. Pubertal suppression treats dysphoria associated with development of secondary sex characteristics, including androgen-driven acne. Gender-affirming hormone therapy influences acne and hair development in transgender adolescents. Dermatologists can help manage skin effects associated with chest binding and gender-affirming hormone therapy and surgery. Provision of patient-centered gender-affirming care in dermatologic and multidisciplinary settings is essential to improve skin and overall outcomes of gender-affirming therapy.Entities:
Keywords: acne; anti-androgen; estrogen; gender-affirming care; testosterone
Year: 2022 PMID: 36237602 PMCID: PMC9552673 DOI: 10.2147/AHMT.S344078
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Adolesc Health Med Ther ISSN: 1179-318X
Definitions of Common Terms Related to Transgender Health
| Term | Definition |
|---|---|
| Having a current gender identity that is concordant with one’s assigned sex at birth | |
| Having a gender identity that is not consistent with one’s assigned sex at birth | |
| Distress that may accompany the incongruence between one’s experienced or expressed gender and one’s assigned sex at birth | |
| Behaviors associated with culturally defined ways of communicating masculinity and/or femininity, or a rejection of these stereotypes | |
| Term indicating a person’s internal sense of their own gender | |
| Assigned male sex at birth and has a gender identity along the feminine spectrum (includes transgender women and may include non-binary people) | |
| Assigned female sex at birth and has a gender identity along the masculine spectrum (includes transgender men and may include non-binary people) | |
| Term describing several gender identity groups, including (but not limited to) (a) someone whose gender identity lies between or outside male and female identities, (b) can experience being a man or woman at separate times, or (c) does not experience having a gender identity or rejects having a gender identity. | |
| Term describing an individual whose gender expression and/or identity does not conform with what is typically seen for an assigned sex within a societal context |
Gender-Affirming Effect and Dermatological Impact of Pubertal Suppression
| Gender Affirming Therapy | Gender-Affirming Effect | Dermatological Impact | Current Management Strategies |
|---|---|---|---|
| GnRH Agonists | Prevents development of secondary sex characteristics incongruent with gender identity | Possibly reduces acne and other androgen-driven dermatological conditions | |
| Testosterone Therapy | Helps develop secondary sex characteristics congruent with the gender identity of transmasculine patients | Worsened Acne | - Topical Retinoids, Antibiotics, and/or Antiandrogens |
| Androgenic Alopecia | - 5-alpha-reductase inhibitors | ||
| Estrogen Therapy | Helps develop secondary sex characteristics congruent to the gender identity of transfemminine patients | Possible Reduced Acne | |
| Insufficient reduction in unwanted hair | - Laser hair removal | ||
| Gender-Affirming Surgeries | Various gender-affirming surgeries help reduce gender dysphoria | Scarring (Potentially Hypertrophic) | - Scar aftercare |
Note: *Cyperotone acetate is not available in the United States.
Figure 1(A and B) Images of patient before acne treatment (C and D) Improved acne after 3 months of oral doxycycline, benzoyl peroxide wash, and topical tretinoin followed by 2 months of isotretinoin.