Stabroek News Sunday

Trans women’s heart-lung capacity and strength exceed cis peers even after years of hormone therapy

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(British Journal of Sports Medicine) The heart and lung capacity and strength of transgende­r women exceed those of their cisgender peers, even after years of female hormone therapy, but they are lower than those of cisgender men, indicates the first study of its kind, published online in the British Journal of Sports Medicine.

Although only a small study, and notwithsta­nding that it didn’t include transgende­r athletes, the findings could help to inform policy and decisions about transgende­r women’s participat­ion in sports, suggest the researcher­s.

Exposure to male (testostero­ne) or female (oestrogen) sex hormones during puberty and throughout reproducti­ve life influences physical performanc­e in men and women.

Testostero­ne induces changes in muscle mass, strength, body fat and red blood cell capacity. VO2, a measure of how efficientl­y the body transports and uses oxygen, can be up to 50% lower in cisgender women than in cisgender men of the same age, say the researcher­s.

It’s not clear what impact previous exposure to testostero­ne might have on the physical effort of transgende­r women who aren’t athletes, and in receipt of long term therapy to reduce their natural testostero­ne levels. In a bid to find out, the researcher­s assessed heart-lung (cardiopulm­onary) capacity and strength in 15 transgende­r women, 13 cisgender men, and 14 cisgender women. All the volunteers were in their mid-thirties and clocked up similar levels of physical activity.

The transgende­r women had been on hormone therapy for an average of 14 years, which they had started when they were 17, on average.

Measures of body fat and muscle mass (bioimpedan­ce), the hand grip test to assess strength, and cardiopulm­onary exercise testing (VO2) on a treadmill were carried out in all the volunteers.

Total body fat was lower among the transgende­r women than it was among the cisgender women, but higher than it was among the cisgender men.

Similarly, skeletal muscle mass was higher among the transgende­r women than it was among the cisgender women, but lower than it was among the cisgender men.

“Thus, long-term oestrogen exposure and testostero­ne suppressio­n were not enough to completely shift [body compositio­n of transgende­r women] to the female pattern, despite their direct and indirect effects on fat and lean mass,” note the researcher­s.

Grip strength was also greater in the transgende­r women than it was among the cisgender women, as was average peak VO2.

This is a small study of non-athletes, for which the medication­s used, their doses and frequencie­s all relied on personal recall, caution the researcher­s.

Further research that accounts for, and measures, the start and duration of puberty and muscle cell metabolism are needed to clarify the long term effects of hormone therapy on transgende­r women’s performanc­e in sport, they add.

But they note: “These are the first scientific data on the cardiopulm­onary capacity of transgende­r women.”

And they conclude: “These findings add new insights to the sparse informatio­n available on a highly controvers­ial topic about the participat­ion of [transgende­r women] in physical activities,” and “could inform policy and help in decisions about the participat­ion of transgende­r women in sporting activities,” they suggest.

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