Endocrine, gender dysphoria, and sexual function benefits of gender-affirming bilateral orchiectomy: patient outcomes and surgical technique.

IF 2.6 3区 医学 Q1 MEDICINE, GENERAL & INTERNAL Sexual Medicine Pub Date : 2024-08-29 eCollection Date: 2024-08-01 DOI:10.1093/sexmed/qfae048
Jenna Stelmar, Robert Victor, Nance Yuan, Shannon M Smith, Samhita Mallavarapu, Sandeep Sandhu, Maurice M Garcia
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Abstract

Background: Gender-affirming bilateral orchiectomy (GABO) may be completed as either a standalone procedure (sGABO) or at the same time as gender-affirming vaginoplasty (vGABO). GABO is postulated to decrease gender-affirming hormone therapy (GAHT) dosages and reduce gender dysphoria, but these phenomena are not empirically described in the medical literature.

Aim: The primary aim of this study was to describe changes in GAHT dosages after sGABO and vGABO. A secondary aim was to assess sGABO patients' preoperative decision-making priorities and postoperative satisfaction.

Methods: A retrospective chart review identified 204 patients who completed GABO as either a standalone procedure (64% of patients) or at the same time as vaginoplasty (36%). Patient demographic data, surgical outcomes, and pre- and postoperative GAHT dosage data were recorded. Patients completed an opinion questionnaire to assessed decision-making priorities, as well as postoperative satisfaction and changes in quality-of-life measures.

Outcomes: Primary outcomes included pre- and postoperative dosages of estradiol, progesterone, and spironolactone. Secondary outcomes included sGABO patient priorities, satisfaction with sGABO, changes in quality-of-life measures between sGABO and vGABO patients, and sGABO recommendations to future patients.

Results: The sGABO and vGABO patients experienced a statistically significant dosage reduction in all three GAHT assessed: estradiol, progesterone, and spironolactone (P < .05). All patients discontinued spironolactone postoperatively. Zero complications related to GABO were recorded for patients in either group. The patient questionnaire revealed that sGABO patients prioritize decreasing endogenous testosterone and reducing their GAHT as most important in their decision to undergo sGABO prior to vaginoplasty. A majority of sGABO patients reported improvement in all nine quality-of-life indices. None of the sGABO patients would recommend against sGABO to a friend who is waiting for vaginoplasty.

Clinical implications: For patients who are interested in vaginoplasty, sGABO may serve as a more immediate, low-risk, intermediary step that comes with the benefits of GABO, including significant GAHT medication reduction and gender dysphoria relief.

Strengths and limitations: This study offers a comprehensive evaluation of the impact of GABO on patients, combining empirical data with subjective patient feedback. Limitations include the retrospective design and the use of unvalidated survey questions.

Conclusion: Prevaginoplasty GABO is a viable option to more immediately alleviate gender dysphoria and reduce GAHT medications for patients who are interested in gender-affirming vaginoplasty.

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确认性别的双侧睾丸切除术对内分泌、性别焦虑症和性功能的益处:患者疗效和手术技巧。
背景:确认性别的双侧睾丸切除术(GABO)既可以单独完成(sGABO),也可以与确认性别的阴道成形术(vGABO)同时完成。据推测,GABO 可减少性别确认激素疗法(GAHT)的用量并减轻性别焦虑症,但医学文献中并未对这些现象进行实证描述。次要目的是评估 sGABO 患者的术前决策优先级和术后满意度:一项回顾性病历审查确定了 204 名患者,这些患者要么单独完成了 GABO 手术(占 64%),要么与阴道成形术同时进行(占 36%)。记录了患者的人口统计学数据、手术结果以及术前和术后 GAHT 的用量数据。患者填写了一份意见调查问卷,以评估决策的优先顺序以及术后满意度和生活质量的变化:主要结果包括雌二醇、孕酮和螺内酯的术前和术后用量。次要结果包括sGABO患者的优先级、对sGABO的满意度、sGABO和vGABO患者生活质量指标的变化以及对未来患者的sGABO建议:结果:sGABO 和 vGABO 患者在雌二醇、黄体酮和螺内酯(P 临床意义)这三种 GAHT 评估中的用量均有统计学意义的显著减少:对于有兴趣进行阴道成形术的患者来说,sGABO 可作为一个更直接、低风险的中间步骤,同时具有 GABO 的益处,包括显著减少 GAHT 用药量和缓解性别焦虑症:本研究结合经验数据和患者的主观反馈,全面评估了 GABO 对患者的影响。局限性包括采用了回顾性设计和未经验证的调查问题:阴道成形术前 GABO 是一种可行的选择,可为有意进行性别确认阴道成形术的患者更快地缓解性别焦虑症并减少 GAHT 药物用量。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Sexual Medicine
Sexual Medicine MEDICINE, GENERAL & INTERNAL-
CiteScore
5.40
自引率
0.00%
发文量
103
审稿时长
22 weeks
期刊介绍: Sexual Medicine is an official publication of the International Society for Sexual Medicine, and serves the field as the peer-reviewed, open access journal for rapid dissemination of multidisciplinary clinical and basic research in all areas of global sexual medicine, and particularly acts as a venue for topics of regional or sub-specialty interest. The journal is focused on issues in clinical medicine and epidemiology but also publishes basic science papers with particular relevance to specific populations. Sexual Medicine offers clinicians and researchers a rapid route to publication and the opportunity to publish in a broadly distributed and highly visible global forum. The journal publishes high quality articles from all over the world and actively seeks submissions from countries with expanding sexual medicine communities. Sexual Medicine relies on the same expert panel of editors and reviewers as The Journal of Sexual Medicine and Sexual Medicine Reviews.
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