4.6 Review

Effects of Hormones on Breast Development and Breast Cancer Risk in Transgender Women

Journal

CANCERS
Volume 15, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/cancers15010245

Keywords

breast development; breast cancer risk; transgender women; exogenous hormones; heterogeneity of hormonal treatments

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Transgender women experience gender dysphoria due to incongruity between their assigned gender at birth and their gender identity. They undergo surgical procedures and hormone therapy to alleviate psychological distress and achieve desired physical changes. Research has focused on hormone regimens and their effects on breast tissue and breast cancer risk in male to female patients. However, the assessment of breast cancer risk is challenging due to diverse treatment approaches and limited long-term follow-up.
Simple Summary Transgender women experience gender dysphoria due to a gender assignment at birth that is incongruent with their gender identity. Transgender people undergo different surgical procedures and receive sex steroids hormones to reduce psychological distress and to induce and maintain desired physical changes. A search of the existing literature dedicated to hormone regimens used for treating male to female patients, their impact on breast tissue (tissue development, incidence and type of breast lesions observed) and breast cancer risk provided the available information for this review. An evaluation of breast cancer risk is complicated because of the heterogeneity of administered treatments and a lack of long-term follow-up studies. Transgender women experience gender dysphoria due to a gender assignment at birth that is incongruent with their gender identity. Transgender people undergo different surgical procedures and receive sex steroids hormones to reduce psychological distress and to induce and maintain desired physical changes. These persons on feminizing hormones represent a unique population to study the hormonal effects on breast development, to evaluate the risk of breast cancer and perhaps to better understand the precise role played by different hormonal components. In MTF (male to female) patients, hormonal treatment usually consists of antiandrogens and estrogens. Exogenous hormones induce breast development with the formation of ducts and lobules and an increase in the deposition of fat. A search of the existing literature dedicated to hormone regimens for MTF patients, their impact on breast tissue (incidence and type of breast lesions) and breast cancer risk provided the available information for this review. The evaluation of breast cancer risk is currently complicated by the heterogeneity of administered treatments and a lack of long-term follow-up in the great majority of studies. Large studies with longer follow-up are required to better evaluate the breast cancer risk and to understand the precise mechanisms on breast development of each exogenous hormone.

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