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About
Gender dysphoria (GD) is a significant suffering lasting more than 6 months in a subject, with regard to the discrepancy felt between his or her gender identity and his or her birth sex. From the onset of puberty, most of these self-identified transgender adolescents will persist in their transgender identity and will undergo hormonal and surgical reassignment when the time comes. International best practice guidelines recommend early treatment from the start of pubertal development to block pubertal progression, with the possibility of hormonal transition by administering sex hormones of the desired sex usually around the age of 16. However, in order to reduce the psychosocial consequences of GD, more and more referral teams are carrying out this transition from the age of 14, although no study has been published to show its benefit compared with a transition at the age of 16. In the absence of treatment, co-morbidity among adolescents suffering from gender dysphoria is very high, with anxiety-depressive states, suicidal risk and dropping out of school in the forefront. Our hypothesis is that hormonal transition started at an age closer to physiological puberty can significantly reduce this comorbidity and improve quality of life for these adolescents. This is the first therapeutic trial to be conducted in France in the transgender adolescent population, in an area where international recommendations based on the principles of Evidence Based Medicine are essentially derived from the clinical expertise of teams who have specialized in the care of transgender people for over forty years, while clinical data derived from structured research are still very scarce.
The results of this study will guide the care of transgender adolescents, allowing them, if the study is positive, to access hormonal treatments earlier and thus more quickly improve their overall functioning, anxiety-depressive symptoms and their quality of life.
Full description
Multicenter, controlled, randomized, open trial with blinded evaluation of the primary endpoint (Prospective Open Blinding Endpoint PROBE study). Randomization will be stratified by sex assigned at birth and the investigating center. The primary analysis will be intention-to-treat and multiple imputation methods will be used to handle missing data. After verification of the inclusion criteria by the child psychiatrist (selection visit), then the pediatric endocrinologist (inclusion visit), the adolescent will be included in the study and will benefit from an initial evaluation (T0) by a psychologist trained for the primary criterion (CGAS) and secondary psycho-affective criteria.The patients will then be sent again to the pediatric endocrinologist who will randomize the patient (via an IT platform) and give them the treatment corresponding to their assigned group. Adolescents in both groups will be reassessed at 16 years +/- 6 months (T1). At the end of this evaluation, patients in the control group will begin their hormonal treatment. Adolescents will undergo a final evaluation at 18 years +/- 6 months (T2), at which time the same criteria as at T0 and T1 will be collected.
Main objective: To evaluate, in gender dysphoric adolescents, having completed their social transition, having or not undergone prior pubertal suppression, the effectiveness of hormonal treatment with estrogens or testosterone initiated at 14 years +/- 6 months of age on the overall functioning of the teenager at 16 years +/- 6 months old.
Primary endpoint: Children's Global Assesment Scale (CGAS) score at age 16 +/- 6 months
Secondary objectives : Evaluate, in gender dysphoric adolescents who have completed their social transition, whether or not they have benefited from prior pubertal suppression:
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60 participants in 2 patient groups
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Central trial contact
David COHEN, MD,PhD; Anne BISSERY
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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