Conference Coverage

Many unknowns on fertility preservation in transgender patients


 

Unknowns around the long-term effects of gender-affirming hormonal treatment on fertility in transgender individuals, especially adolescents, and what this means for fertility preservation, should be red flags for clinicians, according to one expert addressing the issue at the recent virtual ENDO 2021 meeting.

“One of the main concerns regarding fertility preservation in this population is that the decision to seek gender-affirming therapy is often made early in the reproductive lifespan, and for many patients this is well before the consideration of … child-bearing,” remarked Marie Menke, MD, an ob/gyn from University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, presenting in a session dedicated to state-of-the-art approaches to gamete preservation.

“These patients need to consider simultaneously their desire for gender-affirming therapy and their desire for child-bearing,” she added, explaining that gender-affirming therapy typically requires suppression of the hormonal axis that supports reproduction.

“This level of shared decision-making requires time and multidisciplinary involvement in the face of … limited data, and even with the best of counseling it can be quite overwhelming,” Dr. Menke stressed.

Specifically, the effects of gender-affirming therapy on both fertility and fertility preservation options in transgender individuals in comparison to the general population are areas that require much more research, she emphasized.

On the topic of adolescents specifically, she said they are “a special population,” as many seeking medical therapy for gender dysphoria have never considered long-term fertility goals or desires. Reports of such discussions during pediatric gender care vary greatly depending on the age of the patient and their geographic location.

And where such conversations have happened, “often there is no recollection by patients of such discussion prior to referral to endocrinology,” she emphasized.

Session co-moderator Irene Su, MD, a reproductive endocrinologist at the University of California, San Diego, said shared decisions with patients have to be made every day, even though data are limited.

“Little is known about both the adverse medical impact of gender-affirming hormonal therapy on fertility potential, as well as the psychosocial impact of interrupting/reversing gender-affirming hormonal therapy in the future to attempt fertility,” she told this news organization.

However, “because there are reasons to be concerned about an adverse impact on fertility, transgender individuals need access to fertility risk and preservation counseling,” she stressed.

Dr. Su has a special interest in improving reproductive health in young cancer survivors, and this involves similar discussions around fertility preservation – a medical subspecialty known as “oncofertility.”

There is a greater pool of knowledge in this field compared with fertility preservation and family planning in transgender patients, Dr. Su noted.

“While we need similar data in transgender individuals, what we’ve learned from the cancer survivor population is that they and their families want to know about known and unknown fertility risks and options, even if they ultimately do not choose to undertake fertility preservation procedures,” she explains.

Desire for future kids, but <10% currently preserve fertility

Dr. Menke said the estimated prevalence of individuals who identify as transgender is around 0.7% of the U.S. population, and she observed that, “by and large, fertility management involves tissue cryopreservation.”

She presented survey data showing that between 33%-54% of transgender and nonbinary individuals report a desire to have biological children currently, or in the future, and 94.6% are also strongly in support of transgender people having access to fertility preservation procedures.

Likewise, an online cross-sectional survey of over 1,100 people in the general population found that 76.2% agree that transgender individuals should be offered fertility preservation, and 60% support fertility preservation in minors.

Multiple professional societies support counseling in regard to options for fertility preservation and recommend that it should be offered to transgender individuals.

The American Society for Reproductive Medicine (ASRM), the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG), the World Professional Association for Transgender Health (WPATH), and the Endocrine Society all advocate that individuals seeking gender-affirming medical treatment should receive multidisciplinary counseling regarding fertility preservation prior to puberty suppression in adolescents, and prior to cross-sex hormone treatment in both adolescents and adults.

But despite all of these recommendations and the survey findings, fertility preservation rates in transgender patients are low, “at less than 10%,” reported Dr. Menke.

Fertility preservation counseling and management ideally needs to begin prior to initiation of hormone therapy, stressed Dr. Menke.

Given the limited data on the long-term effects of gender-affirming therapy on fertility and its preservation, such counseling often leads to a myriad of questions, she further explained.

“Patients ask ‘What are the chances of having biological children if I don’t pursue fertility preservation?’, and ‘How likely am I to have a biological child if I do pursue fertility preservation?’, as well as issues around access to care, with patients asking, ‘Will I be able to pursue this option [of fertility preservation]?’”

“The chance of having a biological child if fertility preservation is pursued is similar to those [patients with cancer] who receive ‘oncofertility’ care, which has a good prognosis,” she explained.

However, issues around access to care, and the cost of it, can be barriers.

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