Conference Coverage

Cardiovascular risks elevated in transgender youth


 

Hormone therapy, health care disparities, or both could explain risk

In commenting on the study, Joshua D. Safer, MD, executive director of the Center for Transgender Medicine and Surgery, the Mount Sinai Health System, New York, said that although similar cardiovascular effects are known to occur in transgender adults as well, they may or may not be hormone related. Other factors can increase the risk.

“With transgender adults, any differences in lipids or cardiac risk factors relative to cisgender people might be attributable either to hormone therapy or to health care disparities,” he said in an interview.

“The data are mixed. It may be that most differences relate to lack of access to care and to mistreatment by society,” he said. “Even studies that focus on hormones see a worsened situation for trans women versus trans men.”

Other recent research that shows potential cardiovascular effects among adult transgender men includes a study of more than 1,000 transgender men (born female) who received testosterone. That study, which was also presented at the ENDO meeting and was reported by this news organization, found an increased risk for high hematocrit levels, which could lead to a thrombotic event.

However, a study published in Pediatrics, which was also reported by this news organization, that included 611 transgender youths who had taken gender-affirming hormone therapy for more than a year found no increased risk for thrombosis, even in the presence of thrombosis risk factors, including obesity, tobacco use, and family history of thrombosis. However, the senior author of that study pointed out that the duration of follow-up in that study was relatively short, which may have been why they did not find an increased risk for thrombosis.

Dr. Safer noted that transgender youths and adults alike face a host of cultural factors that could play a role in increased cardiovascular risks.

“For adults, the major candidate explanations for worse BMI and cardiac risk factors are societal mistreatment, and for trans women specifically, progestins. For youth, the major candidate explanations are societal mistreatment and lack of access to athletics,” he said.

The authors and Dr. Safer disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

Pages

Recommended Reading

Mental health risks rise with age and stage for gender-incongruent youth
MDedge Pediatrics
Understanding and addressing suicide risk in LGBTQ+ youth
MDedge Pediatrics
Advocate for legislation to improve, protect LGBTQ lives
MDedge Pediatrics
Endocrine societies push back on discriminatory transgender health policies
MDedge Pediatrics
Gender surgical outcomes differ following puberty suppression
MDedge Pediatrics
LGBTQ+ youth issues include fertility counseling and foster care
MDedge Pediatrics
The importance of family acceptance for LGBTQ youth
MDedge Pediatrics
‘I think I’m transgender’: A clinician’s guide to next steps
MDedge Pediatrics
‘Politics has no place here,’ AAP says about transgender care
MDedge Pediatrics
Many unknowns on fertility preservation in transgender patients
MDedge Pediatrics