Author:
Martinerie Laetitia,Morel Yves,Gay Claire-Lise,Pienkowski Catherine,de Kerdanet Marc,Cabrol Sylvie,Lecointre Claudine,Coutant Regis,Baron Sabine,Colle Michel,Brauner Raja,Thibaud Elisabeth,Leger Juliane,Nihoul-Fekete Claire,Bouvattier Claire
Abstract
ContextGender assignment followed by surgery and hormonal therapy is a difficult decision in the management of 45,X/46,XY patients with abnormal external genitalia at birth considering the paucity of studies evaluating pubertal development and fertility outcome, most notably for patients raised as boys.ObjectiveThe purpose of this study was to describe the pubertal course of 20 45,X/46,XY patients born with ambiguous genitalia and raised as boys.MethodsThis is a multicenter retrospective study.ResultsMean age at study was 25.6±2.4 years. Eighty-five percent of the patients presented a ‘classical’ mixed gonadal dysgenetic phenotype at birth. Puberty was initially spontaneous in all but three boys, although in six other patients, testosterone therapy was subsequently necessary for completion of puberty. Sixty-seven percent of the remaining patients presented signs of declined testicular function at the end of puberty (increased levels of FSH and low levels of testosterone and/or inhibin B). Moreover, an abnormal structure of the Y chromosome, known to alter fertility, was found in 10 out of 16 (63%) patients. Two patients developed testicular cancer. Half of the patients have adult penile length of <80 mm. Mean adult height is 156.9±2 cm, regardless of GH treatment.ConclusionsIn summary, 45,X/46,XY children born with ambiguous genitalia and raised as boys have an altered pubertal course and impaired fertility associated with adult short stature, which should, therefore, be taken into consideration for the management of these patients.
Subject
Endocrinology,General Medicine,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism
Cited by
70 articles.
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