No registrations found.
ID
Source
Brief title
Health condition
No diseases are being studied. Amount of bone marrow and visceral fat, thrombocyte function.
Sponsors and support
Intervention
Outcome measures
Primary outcome
Changes in vertebral marrow fat fraction measured by MRI quantitative chemical shift imaging (QCSI), changes in visceral fat, measured by MRI and DXA.
Secondary outcome
Bone turnover markers (Ctx, P1NP, osteocalcin)
Adiponectin and leptin.
Changes in inflammation markers (HsCRP, IL-6, G-CSF)
Changes in platelet activation, measured by PFA Closure Time, PFA Total Volume, PFA Initial Flow Rate, Plasma Thromboxane B2, Flow-cytometry among which p-selectin
Background summary
Rationale: Marrow adipose tissue (MAT) is a unique fat depot, different from white and brown fat. The inverse relationship between MAT and bone mass, has led to the paradigm that MAT is a negative regulator of bone mass. MAT increases with ageing and men have more MAT than women below the age of 50 years. After menopause MAT becomes higher in women than in men. Together these data suggest that sex hormones are important regulators of MAT. Another fat depot with a comparable association with sex hormones is visceral adipose tissue (VAT). Men are more susceptible to VAT accumulation than premenopausal women, however VAT also increases in postmenopausal women. Understanding of VAT regulation is important because it is associated with cardiometabolic risks. Finally, epidemiological studies have shown that premenopausal women are relatively protected against cardiovascular disease, whereas after menopause the incidence seems to catch up with that of males. Although much is known about the influence of estradiol on plasmatic coagulation, much less is known about its influence on platelet function, the latter being of far greater importance in arterial CVD.
Objective: To determine the effect of sex hormones on bone marrow fat, visceral fat, and thrombocytes.
Study population: Adults with gender dysphoria, transwomen (before males-to-females) and transmen (before female-to-males), starting gender affirming hormone treatment in the Center of Expertise in the Amsterdam UMC, location VUmc. We will include 24 transmen and 16 transwomen.
Study objective
We hypothesize that suppression of the gonadal axis will increase bone marrow and visceral fat in biological women and men and subsequent administration of estradiol or testosterone will decrease the amount of bone marrow and visceral fat. We hypothesize that inhibition of conversion of testosterone to estradiol will attenuate the effect of testosterone on marrow and visceral fat.
Study design
baseline, week 6, week 8, week 18, week 58
Intervention
Transwomen will receive a GnRH analogue every 4 weeks from week 0 until week 20 and estradiol from week 6 and cyproterone acetate from week 20 until the end of the study (week 58). Transmen will receive GnRH analogue every 4 weeks from week 0 until week 20, transmen will be randomized to receive either testosterone from week 6 until the end of the study or receive testosterone and an aromatase inhibitor from week 6 until week 18.
Inclusion criteria
Diagnosed with gender dysphoria according to DSM V (female-to-male or male-to-female)
Age between 18 and 50 years
Female-to-male transgenders need to be premenopausal
Starting cross-sex hormone treatment
Exclusion criteria
Previous use of cross-sex hormones
Contraindications to MRI scanning
Participation in other studies (with exception of the ENIGI study)
Use of bone-modifying or adipose tissue-modifying drugs, current or in history (bisphosphonates, estrogen receptor modulators, calcium regulating agents, corticosteroids)
Bone or bone marrow diseases, current or in history (metabolic, malignancy, infectious, mechanic, bone marrow diseases)
Platelet count <120*109/l
History of non-traumatic major bleeding
Known bleeding diathesis
Conditions which require antiplatelet therapy
Usage of antiplatelet therapy
Chronic usage of medication known to influence platelet function (e.g. DOAC’s, NSAIDs, warfarin)
Design
Recruitment
IPD sharing statement
Followed up by the following (possibly more current) registration
No registrations found.
Other (possibly less up-to-date) registrations in this register
No registrations found.
In other registers
Register | ID |
---|---|
NTR-new | NL7513 |
Other | METc VUmc : METc 2017.559, NL63784.029.17 |