Issue: July 2024
Fact checked byRichard Smith

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June 03, 2024
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Data show some nonbinary people prefer lower testosterone doses

Issue: July 2024
Fact checked byRichard Smith
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Key takeaways:

  • Most nonbinary people who initiated low-dose testosterone therapy were still not taking a full dose by 12 months.
  • People identifying as nonbinary may desire a slower or lower degree of physical changes.

BOSTON — Most nonbinary people who initiated low-dose transdermal testosterone for gender affirmation continued taking doses that were lower than current guideline recommendations at 1 year, researchers reported at ENDO 2024.

Current guidelines for initiation of testosterone for gender affirmation assume that transgender people desire “both rapid and complete masculinization,” according to Brendan J. Nolan, MBBS, PhD, a research fellow in the Trans Health Research Group at the University of Melbourne, Australia. However, an increasing number of transgender people, particularly those with nonbinary gender identity, desire lower testosterone doses than recommended to induce slower masculinization, Nolan said.

Testosterone drawing Adobe
Most nonbinary people taking low-dose testosterone continue to take doses lower than recommended guidelines at 1 year. Image: Adobe Stock

“The take-home message is the significant number of nonbinary people who not only initiate but continue testosterone at lower doses than those typically recommended in consensus guidelines,” Nolan told Healio. “People continuing low-dose testosterone might have slower or a lower degree of physical changes. Hopefully, more patients and their clinicians will initiate and continue testosterone doses that align with each person’s affirmation goals.”

Brendan J. Nolan

For the retrospective study, researchers analyzed data from 46 nonbinary people (median age, 27 years) who initiated low-dose testosterone and were followed for at least 6 months. The primary outcomes were transdermal testosterone dose and serum total testosterone concentration.

The median duration of transdermal testosterone dose therapy was 14 months; median transdermal testosterone dose at initiation was 25 mg, rising to a mean 37.5 mg at the last follow-up (P < .01). The median serum total testosterone concentration was 11 nmol/L, within the low-normal range for cisgender men.

By the last follow-up, 87% of people who initiated low-dose testosterone remained on low-dose treatment, whereas 13% increased to full-dose testosterone, Nolan said. Among a subgroup of 30 people with at least 12 months of testosterone treatment, 87% remained on low-dose testosterone therapy by last follow-up.

Guidelines from the Endocrine Society for testosterone treatment of transgender adults wanting masculinizing characteristics recommend 50 mg to 100 mg per day of testosterone 1.6% gel formulation. There are currently no standardized guidelines for people who desire low-dose testosterone treatment.

“We need further research to establish the impact of low-dose testosterone on mental health and physical health outcomes in nonbinary people,” Nolan told Healio.