Publication | Open Access
Cross-Sex Hormone Treatment and Psychobiological Changes in Transsexual Persons: Two-Year Follow-Up Data
193
Citations
30
References
2016
Year
Cross‑sex hormonal treatment (CHT) has been sparsely studied for its impact on the psychobiological well‑being of gender‑dysphoric individuals. The study aimed to determine whether body changes induced by CHT influence psychobiological well‑being in gender‑dysphoric persons. Researchers examined 359 participants cross‑sectionally and followed 54 participants over two years, measuring body metrics (BMI, waist circumference, hair distribution, breast development, testis volume, clitoris length) and administering psychometric assessments of body uneasiness, gender dysphoria, and psychopathology. Participants receiving CHT reported reduced gender dysphoria, body uneasiness, depressive symptoms, and general psychopathology, with breast development in male‑to‑female and increased BMI in female‑to‑male subjects most strongly associated with psychopathology improvement, confirming CHT’s efficacy in enhancing subjective body perception.
To date, there are few studies investigating the impact of body changes induced by cross-sex hormonal treatment (CHT) on psychobiological well-being in gender-dysphoric persons (GDs).The objective of the study was to assess whether CHT-related body changes affect psychobiological well-being in GDs.A consecutive series of 359 GDs was considered for a cross-sectional section of the study. In addition, 54 GDs were studied in a 2-year follow-up. A physical examination was performed, including body mass index, waist circumference, and hair distribution. We also evaluated breast development and testis volume in male to female subjects and clitoris length in female to male. Subjects were asked to complete several psychometric measures for the assessment of body uneasiness, GD, and psychopathology levels. The evaluation was repeated 2 years prospectively.The following results were found: 1) GDs undergoing CHT reported significantly lower subjective levels of GD, body uneasiness, and depressive symptoms as compared with those without; 2) CHT-induced body modifications were significantly associated with a better psychological adjustment; 3) during CHT, GDs reported a significant reduction of general psychopathology, depressive symptoms, and subjective GD, whereas social and legal indicators of GD showed a significant increase across time; and 4) among body changes induced by CHT, only breast development and increased body mass index had a significant impact on psychopathology reduction across time in male to female subjects and female to male subjects, respectively.The aforementioned results support the efficacy of CHT intervention in improving subjective perception of one's own body, which was partially associated with objective changes.
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