Article (Scientific journals)
Consensus Parameter: Research Methodologies to Evaluate Neurodevelopmental Effects of Pubertal Suppression in Transgender Youth.
Chen, Diane; Strang, John F.; Kolbuck, Victoria D. et al.
2020In Transgender Health, 5 (4), p. 246-257
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Keywords :
Delphi; GnRHa; adolescents; expert consensus; puberty blockers; transgender
Abstract :
[en] Purpose: Pubertal suppression is standard of care for early pubertal transgender youth to prevent the development of undesired and distressing secondary sex characteristics incongruent with gender identity. Preliminary evidence suggests pubertal suppression improves mental health functioning. Given the widespread changes in brain and cognition that occur during puberty, a critical question is whether this treatment impacts neurodevelopment. Methods: A Delphi consensus procedure engaged 24 international experts in neurodevelopment, gender development, puberty/adolescence, neuroendocrinology, and statistics/psychometrics to identify priority research methodologies to address the empirical question: is pubertal suppression treatment associated with real-world neurocognitive sequelae? Recommended study approaches reaching 80% consensus were included in the consensus parameter. Results: The Delphi procedure identified 160 initial expert recommendations, 44 of which ultimately achieved consensus. Consensus study design elements include the following: a minimum of three measurement time points, pubertal staging at baseline, statistical modeling of sex in analyses, use of analytic approaches that account for heterogeneity, and use of multiple comparison groups to minimize the limitations of any one group. Consensus study comparison groups include untreated transgender youth matched on pubertal stage, cisgender (i.e., gender congruent) youth matched on pubertal stage, and an independent sample from a large-scale youth development database. The consensus domains for assessment includes: mental health, executive function/cognitive control, and social awareness/functioning. Conclusion: An international interdisciplinary team of experts achieved consensus around primary methods and domains for assessing neurodevelopmental effects (i.e., benefits and/or difficulties) of pubertal suppression treatment in transgender youth.
Disciplines :
Public health, health care sciences & services
Author, co-author :
Chen, Diane
Strang, John F.
Kolbuck, Victoria D.
Rosenthal, Stephen M.
Wallen, Kim
Waber, Deborah P.
Steinberg, Laurence
Sisk, Cheryl L.
Ross, Judith
Paus, Tomas
Mueller, Sven C.
McCarthy, Margaret M.
Micevych, Paul E.
Martin, Carol L.
Kreukels, Baudewijntje P. C.
Kenworthy, Lauren
Herting, Megan M.
Herlitz, Agneta
Haraldsen, Ira R. J. Hebold
Dahl, Ronald
Crone, Eveline A.
Chelune, Gordon J.
Burke, Sarah M.
Berenbaum, Sheri A.
Beltz, Adriene M.
Bakker, Julie  ;  Université de Liège - ULiège > GIGA Neurosciences - Neuroendocrinology
Eliot, Lise
Vilain, Eric
Wallace, Gregory L.
Nelson, Eric E.
Garofalo, Robert
More authors (21 more) Less
Language :
English
Title :
Consensus Parameter: Research Methodologies to Evaluate Neurodevelopmental Effects of Pubertal Suppression in Transgender Youth.
Publication date :
2020
Journal title :
Transgender Health
eISSN :
2380-193X
Publisher :
Mary Ann Liebert, United States
Volume :
5
Issue :
4
Pages :
246-257
Peer reviewed :
Peer Reviewed verified by ORBi
Commentary :
© Diane Chen et al. 2020: Published by Mary Ann Liebert, Inc.
Available on ORBi :
since 29 April 2021

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