Spanos Cassandra, Bretherton Ingrid, Zajac Jeffrey D, Cheung Ada S
Trans Medical Research Group, Department of Medicine (Austin Health), University of Melbourne, Victoria 3084, Australia.
World J Diabetes. 2020 Mar 15;11(3):66-77. doi: 10.4239/wjd.v11.i3.66.
Transgender individuals receiving masculinising or feminising gender-affirming hormone therapy with testosterone or estradiol respectively, are at increased risk of adverse cardiovascular outcomes, including myocardial infarction and stroke. This may be related to the effects of testosterone or estradiol therapy on body composition, fat distribution, and insulin resistance but the effect of gender-affirming hormone therapy on these cardiovascular risk factors has not been extensively examined.
To evaluate the impact of gender-affirming hormone therapy on body composition and insulin resistance in transgender individuals, to guide clinicians in minimising cardiovascular risk.
We performed a review of the literature based on PRISMA guidelines. MEDLINE, Embase and PsycINFO databases were searched for studies examining body composition, insulin resistance or body fat distribution in transgender individuals aged over 18 years on established gender-affirming hormone therapy. Studies were selected for full-text analysis if they investigated transgender individuals on any type of gender-affirming hormone therapy and reported effects on lean mass, fat mass or insulin resistance.
The search strategy identified 221 studies. After exclusion of studies that did not meet inclusion criteria, 26 were included (2 cross-sectional, 21 prospective-uncontrolled and 3 prospective-controlled). Evidence in transgender men suggests that testosterone therapy increases lean mass, decreases fat mass and has no impact on insulin resistance. Evidence in transgender women suggests that feminising hormone therapy (estradiol, with or without anti-androgen agents) decreases lean mass, increases fat mass, and may worsen insulin resistance. Changes to body composition were consistent across almost all studies: Transgender men on testosterone gained lean mass and lost fat mass, and transgender women on oestrogen experienced the reverse. No study directly contradicted these trends, though several small studies of short duration reported no changes. Results for insulin resistance are less consistent and uncertain. There is a paucity of prospective controlled research, and existing prospective evidence is limited by small sample sizes, short follow up periods, and young cohorts of participants.
Further research is required to further characterise the impact of gender-affirming hormone therapy on body composition and insulin resistance in the medium-long term. Until further evidence is available, clinicians should aim to minimise risk by monitoring cardiovascular risk markers regularly in their patients and encouraging healthy lifestyle modifications.
接受分别使用睾酮或雌二醇进行男性化或女性化性别确认激素治疗的跨性别者,发生不良心血管结局(包括心肌梗死和中风)的风险增加。这可能与睾酮或雌二醇治疗对身体成分、脂肪分布和胰岛素抵抗的影响有关,但性别确认激素治疗对这些心血管危险因素的影响尚未得到广泛研究。
评估性别确认激素治疗对跨性别者身体成分和胰岛素抵抗的影响,以指导临床医生将心血管风险降至最低。
我们根据PRISMA指南对文献进行了综述。在MEDLINE、Embase和PsycINFO数据库中检索研究,这些研究考察了接受既定性别确认激素治疗的18岁以上跨性别者的身体成分、胰岛素抵抗或体脂分布。如果研究调查了接受任何类型性别确认激素治疗的跨性别者,并报告了对瘦体重、脂肪量或胰岛素抵抗的影响,则选择这些研究进行全文分析。
检索策略共识别出221项研究。排除不符合纳入标准的研究后,纳入了26项研究(2项横断面研究、21项前瞻性非对照研究和3项前瞻性对照研究)。跨性别男性的证据表明,睾酮治疗可增加瘦体重、减少脂肪量,且对胰岛素抵抗无影响。跨性别女性的证据表明,女性化激素治疗(雌二醇,加或不加抗雄激素药物)可减少瘦体重、增加脂肪量,并可能使胰岛素抵抗恶化。几乎所有研究中身体成分的变化都是一致的:接受睾酮治疗的跨性别男性增加了瘦体重并减少了脂肪量,接受雌激素治疗的跨性别女性则相反。没有研究直接与这些趋势相矛盾,不过有几项短期的小型研究报告没有变化。胰岛素抵抗的结果不太一致且不确定。前瞻性对照研究较少,现有的前瞻性证据受到样本量小、随访期短和参与者队列年轻的限制。
需要进一步研究以更全面地描述性别确认激素治疗在中长期对身体成分和胰岛素抵抗的影响。在获得更多证据之前,临床医生应通过定期监测患者的心血管风险标志物并鼓励其改变健康生活方式来尽量降低风险。