Gender Dysphoria Clinical Trial
— STPOfficial title:
A Pilot Study of Subcutaneous vs. Intramuscular Testosterone for Gender Affirming Therapy
Verified date | June 2016 |
Source | University of British Columbia |
Contact | n/a |
Is FDA regulated | No |
Health authority | Canada: Health Canada |
Study type | Interventional |
For people who identify as transgender, there is a strong sense that they were born into the
wrong body and that their outward looking body does not match how they truly feel about
themselves. They feel male, not female and have always felt that way. There is a great deal
of discomfort or dysphoria about looking and feeling female, and there is a strong desire to
achieve a more masculine appearance. While surgery, clothing and hair for example, can help
a person appear more like a male, many transgender males will want to take testosterone to
make them feel and look more masculine.
This usually involves injecting testosterone into a muscle every 1-2 weeks for many years.
Intramuscular injections can often be uncomfortable or painful, and requires the patient to
be taught how to inject themselves. Or somebody else has to do it. There is a growing trend
in some transgender men to give their injection just below the skin or subcutaneously (like
insulin in a diabetic), because it is less uncomfortable but we don't really know if
testosterone gets into the blood in the same way. At least one clinic in the US already
suggests that patients can use the subcutaneous method but there is almost no research to
show it's the same as intramuscular.
Our project will be looking at a small group of transgender males who are already on
intramuscular testosterone and then switch them over to the same dose of subcutaneous
testosterone, and then compare their levels of testosterone. If those levels are similar,
then patients may chose the less uncomfortable subcutaneous injection.
Status | Completed |
Enrollment | 14 |
Est. completion date | May 2016 |
Est. primary completion date | May 2016 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | No |
Gender | Male |
Age group | 19 Years to 59 Years |
Eligibility |
Inclusion Criteria: - Transgender males or identifying along the male spectrum - Currently on stable doses of weekly IM testosterone - Using either Testosterone cypionate or enanthate - Between 19-59 years old - Stable doses of regular medications - Receive their transgender care from one of five(5) Vancouver-based physicians who specialize in transgender care (Three Bridges or Raven Song Community Health Centres). Exclusion Criteria: - Medically or psychiatrically unstable - Recent or imminent surgery (6-8 weeks) that has or may affect testosterone dosage - Unable to present for nine(9) weeks of weekly blood work and two(2) weeks of alternate day blood work |
Endpoint Classification: Pharmacokinetics Study, Intervention Model: Single Group Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Treatment
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
Canada | Raven Song Community Health Centre | Vancouver | British Columbia |
Canada | Three Bridges Community Health Centre | Vancouver | British Columbia |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
University of British Columbia | Vancouver Coastal Health Research Institute |
Canada,
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Other | Tolerability and discomfort assessment | Study participants will complete a weekly questionnaire regarding tolerability and discomfort, as well as a final questionnaire asking for preferred method of injection. | 11 weeks | No |
Primary | Serum Testosterone (Total) | To compare the steady state levels of total serum testosterone using the Subcutaneous (SC) and Intramuscular (IM) injection routes in a group of transgender males who are already on stable IM dosages. | 11 weeks | No |
Secondary | Pharmacokinetics of serum testosterone | We will be measuring alternate day serum testosterone levels during the subjects final week of IM testosterone injections (week #3) and the final week of SC testosterone injections (week #11). | 2 weeks | No |
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