Abstract
Background
Testosterone-associated vulvovaginitis is an under-recognised cause of genital symptoms in transmasculine patients receiving testosterone as gender-affirming hormone therapy, with 5-years prevalence 64-78%. BASHH’s Gender and Sexual Minorities Special Interest Group convened sexual health, gender, gynaecological and primary care experts and patient representatives to formulate a first-in-world best practice statement.
Method
We searched Medline, Embase, CINAHL, UpToDate, Trip Medical Database and Cochrane, to April 2025, regarding testosterone’s impact on transmasculine people’s vaginal histology and microbiomes, symptoms, and management. Papers on cis- or transgender women, editorials, and study protocols were excluded. Included studies were assessed using the Critical Appraisal Skills Programme tool. Recommendations for best practice were graded using GRADE methodology where possible, and supplemented by expert group consensus where evidence was limited.
Results
14 papers were included, of which 11 were descriptive/non-management focused. Testosterone is associated with vaginal Lactobacilli depletion, increased speciation, pH changes, atrophy, inflammation, and epithelial cell differentiation shift. The diagnosis of testosterone-associated vulvovaginitis is clinical; symptom severity does not reliably correlate with any of the above, nor other markers such as hormone levels. Two small case series and one cohort study (total n = 12) discussed treatment; topical estrogen reduced vaginal symptoms and increased Lactobacilli, with some refractory inflammatory cases requiring topical clindamycin +/− topical steroids. Presumed efficacy and safety are extrapolated from topical estrogen use in cisgender menopausal women.
Conclusion
Specific evidence for testosterone-associated vulvovaginitis management is lacking; we suggest a culturally competent approach, considering it as a differential in any transmasculine people on testosterone with genitourinary symptoms. Offer examination (if possible) to exclude infection or dermatoses; offer first-line treatment with topical vaginal estrogens. Adjunctive/alternative measures include emollients and lubricants; topical clindamycin +/− topical steroids for refractory cases or aerobic/desquamative vaginitis. Long-term maintenance therapy and review is advised. Robust trans-specific clinical trials are needed to strengthen the evidence and optimise long-term outcomes.
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