Goldstein Zil, Khan Musaub, Reisman Tamar, Safer Joshua D
Center for Transgender Medicine and Surgery at Mount Sinai, Mount Sinai Health System and Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York, NY 10029, USA.
New York Medical College, Valhalla, NY USA.
J Blood Med. 2019 Jul 10;10:209-216. doi: 10.2147/JBM.S166780. eCollection 2019.
Venous thromboembolism (VTE) is a potential risk of estrogen therapy. However, data show an improvement in the quality of life for transgender people who use feminizing hormone therapy. With few transgender-specific data, guidance may be drawn from cisgender (nontransgender) data, with a focus on hormonal birth control and postmenopausal hormone replacement therapy (HRT). The aim of this review is to examine the degree to which routes of administration, patient comorbidities, and type of hormone utilized affect the safety of estrogen therapy. We identified 6,349 studies by searching PubMed with the terms "transgender", "estrogen", "VTE", and "HRT". Of these, there were only 13 studies between 1989 and 2018 that investigated the effects of hormone therapy, including types of estrogens used, in transgender women and men. The data suggest that the route of hormone administration, patient demographics, and patient comorbidities all affect estrogen's link with VTE. For example, avoiding ethinyl estradiol might make the use of hormone therapy in trans feminine individuals safer than oral birth control. Data from both cis and trans groups suggest additional VTE risk associated with the use of progestins. While transdermal estrogens dosed up to 0.1 mg/day or below appear lower risk for VTE than other forms of estrogen, it is unclear whether this is related to the delivery method or a dose effect. Finally, even if the risk from exogenous estrogen use remains significant statistically, the absolute clinical risk remains low. Clinicians should avoid the use of ethinyl estradiol. Additionally, data suggest that progestins should be avoided for transgender individuals. Further study of the relationship between estrogen use and the risk of VTE will serve to inform the safest care strategies for transgender individuals.
静脉血栓栓塞(VTE)是雌激素治疗的一个潜在风险。然而,数据显示使用女性化激素疗法的跨性别者生活质量有所改善。由于几乎没有针对跨性别者的特定数据,可从顺性别(非跨性别)数据中获取指导,重点关注激素避孕和绝经后激素替代疗法(HRT)。本综述的目的是研究给药途径、患者合并症以及所使用激素的类型对雌激素治疗安全性的影响程度。我们通过在PubMed上搜索“跨性别者”“雌激素”“VTE”和“HRT”等术语,共识别出6349项研究。其中,在1989年至2018年期间,仅有13项研究调查了激素疗法对跨性别女性和男性的影响,包括所使用的雌激素类型。数据表明,激素给药途径、患者人口统计学特征和患者合并症均会影响雌激素与VTE的关联。例如,避免使用炔雌醇可能会使跨性别女性个体使用激素疗法比口服避孕药更安全。来自顺性别和跨性别群体的数据均表明,使用孕激素会增加VTE风险。虽然每日剂量达0.1毫克或以下的经皮雌激素似乎比其他形式的雌激素引发VTE的风险更低,但尚不清楚这是与给药方式还是剂量效应有关。最后,即使外源性雌激素使用的风险在统计学上仍然显著,其绝对临床风险仍然较低。临床医生应避免使用炔雌醇。此外,数据表明跨性别者应避免使用孕激素。对雌激素使用与VTE风险之间关系的进一步研究将有助于为跨性别者制定最安全的护理策略提供依据。