Background: Gender-affirming mastectomies are a growing necessity for transgender and gender-diverse patients. The preoperative evaluation and surgical outcome must be tailored to the individual, taking into consideration previous medical history, medications, hormonal therapy, patient anatomy, and expectations. Although non-binary patients constitute a significant portion of patients referring for gender-affirming mastectomies, current literature rarely acknowledges them as a separate patient category from trans-masculine patients. Methods: Retrospective cohort, demonstrating the single-surgeon experience with gender-affirming mastectomies over the course of 2 decades. Results: A total of 208 patients were included in this cohort, patients identifying as “non-binary” in gender accounted for 30.8% of the cohort. Non-binary patients were found to be younger (P value<0.001) at the time of surgery, at the time of HRT initiation (P value<0.001), at the first feeling of gender dysphoria, coming out to society, and use of non-female pronouns (P value = 0.04,<0.001 and<0.001, accordingly). In the non-binary patient group, a shorter period of time passed from the first feeling of gender dysphoria to initiation of HRT and surgery (P value<0.001 and[removed]
Gender affirming surgery in non-binary patients: The importance of patient-centered care / Innocenti, Alessandro; Marzouk El Araby, Mohamed. - In: JOURNAL OF PLASTIC, RECONSTRUCTIVE & AESTHETIC SURGERY. - ISSN 1878-0539. - STAMPA. - 85:(2023), pp. 498-499. [10.1016/j.bjps.2023.07.049]
Gender affirming surgery in non-binary patients: The importance of patient-centered care
Innocenti, Alessandro
;
2023
Abstract
Background: Gender-affirming mastectomies are a growing necessity for transgender and gender-diverse patients. The preoperative evaluation and surgical outcome must be tailored to the individual, taking into consideration previous medical history, medications, hormonal therapy, patient anatomy, and expectations. Although non-binary patients constitute a significant portion of patients referring for gender-affirming mastectomies, current literature rarely acknowledges them as a separate patient category from trans-masculine patients. Methods: Retrospective cohort, demonstrating the single-surgeon experience with gender-affirming mastectomies over the course of 2 decades. Results: A total of 208 patients were included in this cohort, patients identifying as “non-binary” in gender accounted for 30.8% of the cohort. Non-binary patients were found to be younger (P value<0.001) at the time of surgery, at the time of HRT initiation (P value<0.001), at the first feeling of gender dysphoria, coming out to society, and use of non-female pronouns (P value = 0.04,<0.001 and<0.001, accordingly). In the non-binary patient group, a shorter period of time passed from the first feeling of gender dysphoria to initiation of HRT and surgery (P value<0.001 and[removed]File | Dimensione | Formato | |
---|---|---|---|
1-s2.0-S1748681523003078-main.pdf
accesso aperto
Licenza:
Open Access
Dimensione
1.02 MB
Formato
Adobe PDF
|
1.02 MB | Adobe PDF |
I documenti in FLORE sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.