The thrombin generation potential increases after feminizing gender affirming hormone treatment and decreases after masculinizing gender affirming hormone treatment and is determined by hormone treatment regimen.
Mette Bøgehave, Dorte Glintborg, Louise Lehmann Christensen, Guy T'Sjoen, Jeroen Vervalcke, Chantal Maria Wiepjes, Martin den Heijer, Marianne Skovsager Andersen, Else-Marie Bladbjerg
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Background: The effects of gender affirming hormone therapy (GAHT) on the overall coagulation potential are not clarified. The global thrombin generation (TG) assay addresses the combined effect of coagulation factors and inhibitors.
Objective: To investigate changes in TG after initiation of feminizing or masculinizing GAHT.
Patients/methods: We included a cohort of 270 transgender women and 348 transgender men aged > 17 years. The primary outcomes were TG variables (endogenous thrombin potential (ETP), peak TG, TG lag time) measured at baseline and after 12 months of feminizing GAHT (three groups of oral/transdermal estradiol and cyproterone acetate) or masculinizing GAHT (seven groups of intramuscular/transdermal testosterone).
Results: In transgender women, ETP and peak TG increased after oral and transdermal estradiol (p<0.001), the largest increase was after oral estradiol (ΔETP: 113 nmol/l x min, p=0.011; Δpeak TG: 28 nmol/l, p=0.009). In transgender men, ETP or peak TG decreased after six testosterone modalities (p<0.05) except transdermal testosterone (NS). The largest 12 months effect was seen in transgender men receiving gestagen at baseline compared with intramuscular testosterone (ΔETP: -199 nmol/l x min, p<0.001; Δpeak TG: -38 nmol/l, p=0.008) and transdermal testosterone (ΔETP: -216 nmol/l x min, p<0.001; Δpeak TG: -40 nmol/l, p=0.007). Lag time was prolonged for six testosterone modalities (p<0.05), except in the subgroup receiving baseline gestagen, and with no between-group differences.
Conclusions: Feminizing and masculinizing GAHT for 12 months affected coagulation in opposite directions. Feminizing GAHT was procoagulant whereas masculinizing GAHT was anticoagulant. Of note, transdermal feminizing GAHT had the least pronounced procoagulant effect.
期刊介绍:
The Journal of Thrombosis and Haemostasis (JTH) serves as the official journal of the International Society on Thrombosis and Haemostasis. It is dedicated to advancing science related to thrombosis, bleeding disorders, and vascular biology through the dissemination and exchange of information and ideas within the global research community.
Types of Publications:
The journal publishes a variety of content, including:
Original research reports
State-of-the-art reviews
Brief reports
Case reports
Invited commentaries on publications in the Journal
Forum articles
Correspondence
Announcements
Scope of Contributions:
Editors invite contributions from both fundamental and clinical domains. These include:
Basic manuscripts on blood coagulation and fibrinolysis
Studies on proteins and reactions related to thrombosis and haemostasis
Research on blood platelets and their interactions with other biological systems, such as the vessel wall, blood cells, and invading organisms
Clinical manuscripts covering various topics including venous thrombosis, arterial disease, hemophilia, bleeding disorders, and platelet diseases
Clinical manuscripts may encompass etiology, diagnostics, prognosis, prevention, and treatment strategies.