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OR11-3 Evidence for Preserved Ovarian Reserve in Transgender Men Receiving Testosterone Therapy: Anti-Mullerian Hormone Serum Levels Decrease Modestly after One Year of Treatment
Background: Although successful pregnancies carried by transgender men have been reported, long-term effects of testosterone therapy on fertility remain unknown. Aims: To study markers of ovarian reserve during testosterone therapy. Methods: Prospective open-label study of transgender men prior and...
Autores principales: | , , , , , , , , |
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Formato: | Online Artículo Texto |
Lenguaje: | English |
Publicado: |
Endocrine Society
2019
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Materias: | |
Acceso en línea: | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6555034/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/js.2019-OR11-3 |
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author | Yaish, Iris Malinger, Gustavo Foad, Azem Golani, Nechama Yael, Sofer Tordjman, Karen Amir, Hadar Greenman, Yona Stern, Naftali |
author_facet | Yaish, Iris Malinger, Gustavo Foad, Azem Golani, Nechama Yael, Sofer Tordjman, Karen Amir, Hadar Greenman, Yona Stern, Naftali |
author_sort | Yaish, Iris |
collection | PubMed |
description | Background: Although successful pregnancies carried by transgender men have been reported, long-term effects of testosterone therapy on fertility remain unknown. Aims: To study markers of ovarian reserve during testosterone therapy. Methods: Prospective open-label study of transgender men prior and during treatment with testosterone. Sampling was conducted at baseline and 12 months after treatment initiation. Main outcome measures: Anti-Mullerian Hormone (AMH), gonadotropins and sex steroid serum levels; endometrial thickness and antral follicular count determined by pelvic US. Results: 52 subjects (23.4±6.1 y) were recruited, 32% of which were in a stable relationship. 17% expressed desire to have children while 26 (50%) were unsure about future parenthood. Four (7%) have already undergone fertility preservation procedures. Interestingly, 5 participants (9%) that initially were sexually attracted to women became bisexual under testosterone treatment. Complete data is available for 32 subjects. In the course of 12 months of treatment, AMH levels decreased from 5.65±0.52ng/ml at baseline to 4.89±0.65 ng/ml (p=0.036). Antral follicular count (16.9±1.4, 13.9±1.7) and endometrial thickness (6.9±0.7, 5.6±0.5 mm) remained unchanged. As expected, testosterone levels increased (0.84±0.1, 7 ±0.7 nmol/l; p<0.0001) and estradiol levels decreased (90.8±7.9, 55.4±4.6 pmol/l; p=0.0013) during therapy, with a concomitant decrease in LH (7.56±0.7, 3.8±0.6 mIU/ml; p=0.0012), but not FSH (5.1±0.41, 4±0.3; p=0.07 mIU/ml) levels. Conclusion: AMH levels slightly decrease during testosterone treatment but remain within the normal, "healthy" range, thus likely indicating well-preserved ovarian reserve. This assumption is corroborated by the unchanged antral follicular count. The significance of these findings on fertility potential remains to be explored. Unless otherwise noted, all abstracts presented at ENDO are embargoed until the date and time of presentation. For oral presentations, the abstracts are embargoed until the session begins. Abstracts presented at a news conference are embargoed until the date and time of the news conference. The Endocrine Society reserves the right to lift the embargo on specific abstracts that are selected for promotion prior to or during ENDO. |
format | Online Article Text |
id | pubmed-6555034 |
institution | National Center for Biotechnology Information |
language | English |
publishDate | 2019 |
publisher | Endocrine Society |
record_format | MEDLINE/PubMed |
spelling | pubmed-65550342019-06-13 OR11-3 Evidence for Preserved Ovarian Reserve in Transgender Men Receiving Testosterone Therapy: Anti-Mullerian Hormone Serum Levels Decrease Modestly after One Year of Treatment Yaish, Iris Malinger, Gustavo Foad, Azem Golani, Nechama Yael, Sofer Tordjman, Karen Amir, Hadar Greenman, Yona Stern, Naftali J Endocr Soc Reproductive Endocrinology Background: Although successful pregnancies carried by transgender men have been reported, long-term effects of testosterone therapy on fertility remain unknown. Aims: To study markers of ovarian reserve during testosterone therapy. Methods: Prospective open-label study of transgender men prior and during treatment with testosterone. Sampling was conducted at baseline and 12 months after treatment initiation. Main outcome measures: Anti-Mullerian Hormone (AMH), gonadotropins and sex steroid serum levels; endometrial thickness and antral follicular count determined by pelvic US. Results: 52 subjects (23.4±6.1 y) were recruited, 32% of which were in a stable relationship. 17% expressed desire to have children while 26 (50%) were unsure about future parenthood. Four (7%) have already undergone fertility preservation procedures. Interestingly, 5 participants (9%) that initially were sexually attracted to women became bisexual under testosterone treatment. Complete data is available for 32 subjects. In the course of 12 months of treatment, AMH levels decreased from 5.65±0.52ng/ml at baseline to 4.89±0.65 ng/ml (p=0.036). Antral follicular count (16.9±1.4, 13.9±1.7) and endometrial thickness (6.9±0.7, 5.6±0.5 mm) remained unchanged. As expected, testosterone levels increased (0.84±0.1, 7 ±0.7 nmol/l; p<0.0001) and estradiol levels decreased (90.8±7.9, 55.4±4.6 pmol/l; p=0.0013) during therapy, with a concomitant decrease in LH (7.56±0.7, 3.8±0.6 mIU/ml; p=0.0012), but not FSH (5.1±0.41, 4±0.3; p=0.07 mIU/ml) levels. Conclusion: AMH levels slightly decrease during testosterone treatment but remain within the normal, "healthy" range, thus likely indicating well-preserved ovarian reserve. This assumption is corroborated by the unchanged antral follicular count. The significance of these findings on fertility potential remains to be explored. Unless otherwise noted, all abstracts presented at ENDO are embargoed until the date and time of presentation. For oral presentations, the abstracts are embargoed until the session begins. Abstracts presented at a news conference are embargoed until the date and time of the news conference. The Endocrine Society reserves the right to lift the embargo on specific abstracts that are selected for promotion prior to or during ENDO. Endocrine Society 2019-04-30 /pmc/articles/PMC6555034/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/js.2019-OR11-3 Text en Copyright © 2019 Endocrine Society https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ This article has been published under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial, No-Derivatives License (CC BY-NC-ND; https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/). |
spellingShingle | Reproductive Endocrinology Yaish, Iris Malinger, Gustavo Foad, Azem Golani, Nechama Yael, Sofer Tordjman, Karen Amir, Hadar Greenman, Yona Stern, Naftali OR11-3 Evidence for Preserved Ovarian Reserve in Transgender Men Receiving Testosterone Therapy: Anti-Mullerian Hormone Serum Levels Decrease Modestly after One Year of Treatment |
title | OR11-3 Evidence for Preserved Ovarian Reserve in Transgender Men Receiving Testosterone Therapy: Anti-Mullerian Hormone Serum Levels Decrease Modestly after One Year of Treatment |
title_full | OR11-3 Evidence for Preserved Ovarian Reserve in Transgender Men Receiving Testosterone Therapy: Anti-Mullerian Hormone Serum Levels Decrease Modestly after One Year of Treatment |
title_fullStr | OR11-3 Evidence for Preserved Ovarian Reserve in Transgender Men Receiving Testosterone Therapy: Anti-Mullerian Hormone Serum Levels Decrease Modestly after One Year of Treatment |
title_full_unstemmed | OR11-3 Evidence for Preserved Ovarian Reserve in Transgender Men Receiving Testosterone Therapy: Anti-Mullerian Hormone Serum Levels Decrease Modestly after One Year of Treatment |
title_short | OR11-3 Evidence for Preserved Ovarian Reserve in Transgender Men Receiving Testosterone Therapy: Anti-Mullerian Hormone Serum Levels Decrease Modestly after One Year of Treatment |
title_sort | or11-3 evidence for preserved ovarian reserve in transgender men receiving testosterone therapy: anti-mullerian hormone serum levels decrease modestly after one year of treatment |
topic | Reproductive Endocrinology |
url | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6555034/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/js.2019-OR11-3 |
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