Gender-affirming hormone therapy: effects on cardiovascular risk and vascular function

Gender-affirming hormone therapy (GAHT) is used in individuals with gender identity dysphoria to align an individual's secondary sexual characteristics with their affirmed gender. We conducted a systematic review of the literature to explore the mechanisms regarding the effects of GAHT on the v...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inEndocrine Connections Vol. 14; no. 2
Main Authors McGinley, Kirsty A, Lucas-Herald, Angela K, Connelly, Paul, Delles, Christian
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published England Bioscientifica Ltd 01.02.2025
Bioscientifica
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Summary:Gender-affirming hormone therapy (GAHT) is used in individuals with gender identity dysphoria to align an individual's secondary sexual characteristics with their affirmed gender. We conducted a systematic review of the literature to explore the mechanisms regarding the effects of GAHT on the vasculature. A literature search using PUBMED, Embase, Scopus and Lilacs was performed using search terms for GAHT, cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk and transgender. Studies were screened by two independent reviewers. Comparison to a cohort of transgender individuals naïve or prior to GAHT or a cisgender population was required. Quality assessment was done using the relevant Critical Skills Appraisal Programme checklists. Out of 2,564 potentially eligible studies, 69 studies met the inclusion criteria. Studies provided evidence of beneficial changes in CVD risk profile including reduced haemoglobin and pro-inflammatory markers, and atheroprotective changes in lipids in transgender women. In transgender men there was evidence of negative changes in CVD risk profile including atherogenic changes in lipids and increased haemoglobin, arterial stiffness, and pro-inflammatory markers. There is a paucity of research across non-traditional measures of CVD risk which in combination with heterogeneous study design, loss of follow-up, low sample sizes and lack of diversity in age and ethnicity requires the results to be interpreted with caution. More evidence is required to elucidate the mechanisms behind the increased risk of CVD in the transgender population and determine if GAHT is a contributing factor.
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This systematic review was presented as a poster at the Scottish Cardiovascular Forum 2024 and the abstract has been published in the BMJ Heart Online Supplement.
ISSN:2049-3614
2049-3614
DOI:10.1530/EC-24-0222