Sperm quality in transgender women before or after gender affirming hormone therapy—A prospective cohort study

Background Due to recent changes in the legal framework, access to fertility preservation (FP) for transgender individuals has opened up in several countries. In Sweden and the Nordic countries, fertility preservation for medical reasons is fully reimbursed as part of the established tax‐funded heal...

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Veröffentlicht in:Andrology (Oxford) 2021-11, Vol.9 (6), p.1773-1780
Hauptverfasser: Rodriguez‐Wallberg, Kenny A., Häljestig, Jakob, Arver, Stefan, Johansson, Anna L. V., Lundberg, Frida E.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Background Due to recent changes in the legal framework, access to fertility preservation (FP) for transgender individuals has opened up in several countries. In Sweden and the Nordic countries, fertility preservation for medical reasons is fully reimbursed as part of the established tax‐funded healthcare services. As this issue is relatively new, procedures for FP have seldom been reported in the transgender patient population. The very limited literature has indicated that transgender women may have poorer sperm quality than cisgender men when assessing samples aimed at semen banking. Objectives To assess sperm quality parameters of semen samples provided for FP by transgender women before or after gender affirming hormone therapy (GAHT), and to compare sperm quality with a reference population of unscreened men defined by the World Health Organization (WHO). Additionally, we aimed to describe referral patterns over calendar time and estimate time from referral to semen cryopreservation. Material and Methods Prospective cohort study of 212 transgender women referred for FP to the Reproductive Medicine Clinic of Karolinska University Hospital, Sweden, between 2013 and 2018. Among 177 individuals that provided semen samples for cryopreservation, 16 had previously received GAHT. Results Individuals with previous GAHT presented with significantly lower total sperm count than individuals without GAHT (p = 0.002). However, higher proportions of sperm abnormalities were also noted among individuals who had not undergone previous GAHT, compared to the WHO reference population (p 
ISSN:2047-2919
2047-2927
2047-2927
DOI:10.1111/andr.12999