From the Journals

‘Top’ surgery for trans youth: Advance or dangerous medicine?


 

FROM JAMA SURGERY

Current studies of gender-affirming surgeries lack standardization

In their viewpoint, Dr. Agochukwu-Mmonu and colleagues state that use of a CED would not only help provide an evidence base but would also ensure better-informed policy access and coverage decisions to help standardize approaches to gender surgery in the United States.

Currently, they note, “Studies examining the mental health benefit for patients undergoing gender-affirming surgeries include measures that lack standardization, evaluate different interventions (that is, surgeries are rarely done with concurrent hormone administration), include dissimilar patient populations, and use different study designs.”

This difference in study design leads to variation in reported outcomes. Although many studies have shown benefit, others report that patients have unrealistic expectations or experience regret, Dr. Agochukwu-Mmonu and coauthors conclude.

CED provides an option that would enable informed decisions. “It allows the deliberate use of innovative therapies, explicit integration of transgender and nonbinary patient input, and ongoing systematic evaluation aimed to identify specific patient groups who would or would not benefit from their use.”

This leads back to Ms. Clayton’s central question around whether the gender-affirmative approach is a medical advance or dangerous medicine.

“Why are these experimental interventions, with inherent risks and scarce, low-quality evidence for benefits being implemented outside HREC-regulated clinical trial settings?’” she wonders.

Ms. Clayton has declared no conflicts of interest.

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

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