The Impact of Testosterone Therapy on the Vaginal Microbiota of Transgender Men and Nonbinary People: A Prospective Study.
- 2025-03-03
- The Journal of infectious diseases 232(3)
- Olivia T Van Gerwen
- Kristal J Aaron
- Emma Sophia Kay
- Krishmita Siwakoti
- Angela Pontius
- Saralyn Richter
- Z Alex Sherman
- Keonte J Graves
- Ashutosh Tamhane
- Jacob H Elnaggar
- Meng Luo
- Evelyn Toh
- David E Nelson
- Nicholas J Van Wagoner
- Christopher M Taylor
- Christina A Muzny
- PubMed: 40037329
- DOI: 10.1093/infdis/jiaf114
Background
Understanding the impact of testosterone on the vaginal microbiota of transgender men (TGM) and nonbinary people assigned female sex at birth over time is imperative as vaginal dysbiosis and incident bacterial vaginosis (iBV) may cause bothersome genital symptoms and increase human immunodeficiency virus/sexually transmitted infection (HIV/STI) acquisition risk. We investigated shifts in the composition of the vaginal microbiota over time in TGM initiating testosterone for gender-affirming hormone therapy, including development of vaginal dysbiosis and iBV.Methods
Participants ages ≥18 years, assigned female sex at birth and reporting TGM or nonbinary identity, interested in starting injectable testosterone, demonstrating optimal vaginal microbiota, with no current STI(s) were enrolled. Participants self-collected daily vaginal specimens for 7 days prior to testosterone initiation and 90 days thereafter for vaginal Gram staining and 16S rRNA gene sequencing. Episodes of vaginal dysbiosis and iBV were defined as Nugent scores ≥4 or ≥7, respectively, each for ≥2 consecutive days.Results
Between February 2022 and November 2023, 9 participants enrolled, 89% (8/9) developed ≥1 episode(s) of vaginal dysbiosis after testosterone initiation, and 56% (5/9) developed iBV. Among those who developed iBV, most did so between days 20 and 40 after testosterone initiation. Community state type (CST) I was found most often in participants who did not develop iBV and CST IV-B most often in participants who developed iBV. Sexual activity and menses also appeared to influence the development of iBV.Conclusions
The majority of participants developed vaginal dysbiosis including iBV. Additional studies with larger sample sizes are needed to further elucidate how testosterone impacts the vaginal microbiota.Research Insights
| Supplement | Health Outcome | Effect Type | Effect Size |
|---|---|---|---|
| Streptococcus thermophilus SD-5207 | No Human Health Outcome Reported | Neutral | Small |