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Our immune systems protect us from infection but can also cause disease, for example by attacking our own bodies (autoimmune disease), or driving chronic inflammation in conditions such as heart disease. The immune systems of men and women function differently, as evidenced by differing rates of disease with autoimmune disease being more common in women whilst men are more susceptible to infection. We don't know why these differences exist, but if we could understand we may be able to develop new treatments to treat or prevent immune driven diseases. So far, we know that both sex chromosomes and hormones affect how the immune system functions, but not the exact contribution of each or how they interact. One way to study this is to work with transgender people. Transgender people identify as a gender different from their sex assigned at birth and some may choose to take the sex hormones of the gender they identify with, which is known as gender affirming hormone therapy (GAHT). Given that these changes affect their sex hormone profile and not their chromosomes, any changes in their immune system would be driven by hormones only. This would help us understand not only how sex hormones shape the immune system more generally, but also the disease risk in transgender people and enable better patient counselling. In this study, transgender patients starting on GAHT at 56 Dean Street clinic in London would be invited to donate blood samples before starting therapy, at 1 month (optional) and at 3 and 6 months. These samples would be analysed at the Laboratory of Medical Sciences to examine how the different types of immune cells change with therapy and how they respond to different immune triggers (stimuli). We aim to recruit 500 individuals and anticipate the study will last up to 3 years.
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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