- Patient Care & Health Information
- Tests & Procedures
- Feminizing surgery
Feminizing surgery, also called gender-affirming surgery, involves procedures that help better align the body with a person's gender identity. Research has found that gender-affirming surgery can have a positive impact on well-being and sexual function.
Feminizing surgery includes several options, such as top surgery to increase the size of the breasts. That procedure also is called breast augmentation. Bottom surgery can involve removal of the testicles, or removal of the testicles and penis and the creation of a vagina, labia and clitoris. Facial procedures or body-contouring procedures can be used as well.
Not everybody chooses to have feminizing surgery. These surgeries can be expensive, carry risks and complications, and involve follow-up medical care and procedures. Certain surgeries change fertility and sexual sensations.
Your healthcare team can talk with you about your options and help you weigh the risks and benefits.
Products & Services
- A Book: Mayo Clinic Family Health Book
- Available Sexual Health Solutions at Mayo Clinic Store
- Newsletter: Mayo Clinic Health Letter — Digital Edition
Why it's done
Many people seek feminizing surgery as a step in the process of treating discomfort or distress because their gender identity differs from their sex assigned at birth. This is called gender dysphoria.
For some people, having feminizing surgery feels like a natural step. It's important to their sense of self. Others choose not to have surgery. All people relate to their bodies differently and should make individual choices that best suit their needs.
Feminizing surgery may include:
- Removal of the testicles alone. This is called orchiectomy.
- Removal of the penis, called penectomy.
- Removal of the testicles.
- Creation of a vagina, called vaginoplasty.
- Creation of a clitoris, called clitoroplasty.
- Creation of labia, called labioplasty.
- Breast surgery. Surgery to increase breast size is called top surgery or breast augmentation. It can be done through implants, the placement of tissue expanders under breast tissue, or the transplantation of fat from other parts of the body into the breast.
- Plastic surgery on the face. This is called facial feminization surgery. It involves plastic surgery techniques in which the jaw, chin, cheeks, forehead, nose, and areas surrounding the eyes, ears or lips are changed to create a more feminine appearance.
- Tummy tuck, called abdominoplasty.
- Buttock lift, called gluteal augmentation.
- Liposuction, a surgical procedure that uses a suction technique to remove fat from specific areas of the body.
- Voice feminizing therapy and surgery. These are techniques used to raise voice pitch.
- Tracheal shave. This surgery reduces the thyroid cartilage, also called the Adam's apple.
- Scalp hair transplant. This procedure removes hair follicles from the back and side of the head and transplants them to balding areas.
- Hair removal. A laser can be used to remove unwanted hair. Another option is electrolysis. It involves inserting a tiny needle into each hair follicle. The needle emits a pulse of electric current that damages and eventually destroys the follicle.
Like any other type of major surgery, many types of feminizing surgery pose a risk of bleeding, infection and a reaction to anesthetic. Depending on the procedures, other health concerns that might happen due to feminizing surgery include:
- Delayed wound healing.
- Fluid buildup beneath the skin, called seroma.
- Bruising, also called hematoma.
- Changes in skin sensation such as pain that doesn't go away, tingling, reduced sensation or numbness.
- Damaged or dead body tissue — a condition known as tissue necrosis — such as in the surgically created vagina or labia.
- A blood clot in a deep vein, called deep vein thrombosis, or a blood clot in the lung, called pulmonary embolism.
- Development of an irregular connection between two body parts, called a fistula, such as between the bladder or bowel into the vagina.
- Urinary problems, such as incontinence.
- Pelvic floor problems.
- Permanent scarring.
- Loss of sexual pleasure or function.
- Worsening of a behavioral health problem.
Certain types of feminizing surgery may limit or end fertility. If you want to have biological children and you're having surgery that involves your reproductive organs, talk with your healthcare professional before surgery. You may be able to freeze sperm with a technique called sperm cryopreservation.
How you prepare
Before surgery, you meet with your surgeon. Work with a surgeon who is board certified and experienced in the procedures you want. Your surgeon talks with you about your options and the potential results. The surgeon also may provide information on details such as the type of anesthesia that will be used during surgery and the kind of follow-up care that you may need.
Follow your healthcare team's directions on preparing for your procedures. This may include guidelines on eating and drinking. You may need to make changes in the medicine you take. Before surgery, you also may need to stop using nicotine, including vaping, smoking and chewing tobacco.
Because feminizing surgery might cause physical changes that cannot be reversed, you must give informed consent after thoroughly discussing:
- Risks and benefits.
- Alternatives to surgery, if applicable.
- Expectations and goals.
- Potential complications.
- Impact on sexual function and fertility.
Evaluation for surgery
Before surgery, a healthcare professional evaluates your health to address any medical conditions that might prevent you from having surgery or that could affect the procedure. This evaluation may be done by a health professional with expertise in transgender medicine. The evaluation might include:
- A review of your personal and family medical history.
- A physical exam.
- A review of any hormone therapy you've had.
- A review of your vaccinations.
- Screening tests for some conditions and diseases.
- Identification and management, if needed, of tobacco use, drug use, alcohol use disorder, and HIV or other sexually transmitted infections.
- Discussion about birth control, fertility and sexual function.
You also may have a behavioral health evaluation by a healthcare professional with expertise in transgender health. That evaluation might assess:
- Gender dysphoria.
- Mental health concerns.
- Sexual health concerns.
- The impact of gender dysphoria at work, at school, at home and in social settings.
- Substance use or use of hormone therapy or supplements not recommended by a health professional.
- Support from family, friends and caregivers.
- Your goals and expectations of treatment.
- Care planning and follow-up after surgery.
Other considerations
Health insurance coverage for feminizing surgery varies widely. Before you have surgery, check with your insurance provider to see what will be covered.
Before surgery, you might consider talking with others who have had feminizing surgery. If you don't know someone, ask your healthcare professional about support groups in your area or online resources you can trust. People who have gone through the process may be able to help you set your expectations and offer a point of comparison for your own goals of the surgery.
What you can expect
Facial feminization surgery.
Facial feminization surgery may involve a range of procedures to change facial features, including:
- Moving the hairline to create a smaller forehead.
- Enlarging the lips and cheekbones with implants.
- Reshaping the jaw and chin.
- Undergoing skin-tightening surgery after bone reduction.
These surgeries are typically done on an outpatient basis, so you don't have to stay in a hospital overnight. Recovery time for most of them is several weeks. Recovering from jaw procedures takes longer.
Tracheal shave
A tracheal shave minimizes the thyroid cartilage, also called the Adam's apple. During this procedure, a small cut is made under the chin, in the shadow of the neck or in a skin fold to conceal the scar. The surgeon then reduces and reshapes the cartilage. This is typically an outpatient procedure, requiring no hospital stay.
Top surgery
- Breast augmentation incisions
As part of top surgery, the surgeon makes cuts around the areola, near the armpit or in the crease under the breast.
- Placement of breast implants or tissue expanders
During top surgery, the surgeon places the implants under the breast tissue. If feminizing hormones haven't made the breasts large enough, an initial surgery might be needed to have devices called tissue expanders placed in front of the chest muscles.
Hormone therapy with estrogen stimulates breast growth, but many people aren't satisfied with that growth alone. Top surgery is a surgical procedure to increase breast size that may involve implants, fat grafting or both.
During this surgery, a surgeon makes cuts around the areola, near the armpit or in the crease under the breast. Next, silicone or saline implants are placed under the breast tissue. Another option is to transplant fat, muscles or tissue from other parts of the body into the breasts.
If feminizing hormones haven't made the breasts large enough for top surgery, a surgery may be needed first to place devices called tissue expanders in front of the chest muscles. After that surgery, visits to a healthcare professional are needed every few weeks to have a small amount of saline injected into the tissue expanders. This slowly stretches the chest skin and other tissues to make room for the implants. When the skin has been stretched enough, another surgery is done to remove the expanders and place the implants.
Genital surgery
- Anatomy before and after penile inversion
During penile inversion, the surgeon makes a cut in the area between the rectum and the urethra and prostate. This forms a tunnel that becomes the new vagina. The surgeon lines the inside of the tunnel with skin from the scrotum, the penis or both. If there's not enough penile or scrotal skin, the surgeon might take skin from another area of the body and use it for the new vagina as well.
Orchiectomy
Orchiectomy is a surgery to remove the testicles. Because testicles make sperm and the hormone testosterone, an orchiectomy might eliminate the need to use testosterone blockers. It also may lower the amount of estrogen needed to achieve and maintain the appearance you want.
This type of surgery typically does not require a hospital stay. A local anesthetic may be used, so only the testicular area is numbed. Or the surgery may be done using general anesthesia. This means you are in a sleep-like state during the procedure.
To remove the testicles, a surgeon makes a cut in the scrotum and removes the testicles through the opening. Orchiectomy is done as part of the surgery for vaginoplasty. But some people prefer to have it done alone without other genital surgery.
Vaginoplasty
Vaginoplasty is the surgical creation of a vagina. During vaginoplasty, skin from the shaft of the penis and the scrotum is used to create a vaginal canal. This surgical approach is called penile inversion. In some techniques, the skin also is used to create the labia. That procedure is called labiaplasty. Labiaplasty is sometimes done without creation of a vaginal canal. This is called zero-depth vaginoplasty.
To surgically create a clitoris, a surgeon uses the tip of the penis and the nerves that supply it. This procedure is called a clitoroplasty. In some people, skin can be taken from another area of the body or tissue from the colon may be used to create the vagina. During vaginoplasty, the testicles are removed if that hasn't been done before.
Most surgeons require laser hair removal in the area of the penis and scrotum to provide hair-free tissue for the procedure. That process can take several months.
After vaginoplasty, a tube called a catheter is placed in the urethra to collect urine for several days. You need to be closely watched for about a week after surgery. Recovery can take up to two months. Your healthcare professional gives you instructions about when you may begin sexual activity with your new vagina.
After surgery, you're given a set of vaginal dilators of increasing sizes. You insert the dilators in your vagina to maintain, lengthen and stretch it. Follow your healthcare professional's directions on how often to use the dilators. To keep the vagina open, dilation needs to continue long term.
Because the prostate gland isn't removed during surgery, you need to follow age-appropriate recommendations for prostate cancer screening. Following surgery, it is possible to develop urinary symptoms from enlargement of the prostate.
Dilation after gender-affirming surgery
This material is for your education and information only. This content does not replace medical advice, diagnosis and treatment. If you have questions about a medical condition, always talk with your health care provider.
Narrator: Vaginal dilation is important to your recovery and ongoing care. You have to dilate to maintain the size and shape of your vaginal canal and to keep it open.
Jessi: I think for many trans women, including myself, but especially myself, I looked forward to one day having surgery for a long time. So that meant looking up on the internet what the routines would be, what the surgery entailed. So I knew going into it that dilation was going to be a very big part of my routine post-op, but just going forward, permanently.
Narrator: Vaginal dilation is part of your self-care. You will need to do vaginal dilation for the rest of your life.
Alissa (nurse): If you do not do dilation, your vagina may shrink or close. If that happens, these changes might not be able to be reversed.
Narrator: For the first year after surgery, you will dilate many times a day. After the first year, you may only need to dilate once a week. Most people dilate for the rest of their life.
Jessi: The dilation became easier mostly because I healed the scars, the stitches held up a little bit better, and I knew how to do it better. Each transgender woman's vagina is going to be a little bit different based on anatomy, and I grew to learn mine. I understand, you know, what position I needed to put the dilator in, how much force I needed to use, and once I learned how far I needed to put it in and I didn't force it and I didn't worry so much on oh, did I put it in too far, am I not putting it in far enough, and I have all these worries and then I stress out and then my body tenses up. Once I stopped having those thoughts, I relaxed more and it was a lot easier.
Narrator: You will have dilators of different sizes. Your health care provider will determine which sizes are best for you. Dilation will most likely be painful at first. It's important to dilate even if you have pain.
Alissa (nurse): Learning how to relax the muscles and breathe as you dilate will help. If you wish, you can take the pain medication recommended by your health care team before you dilate.
Narrator: Dilation requires time and privacy. Plan ahead so you have a private area at home or at work. Be sure to have your dilators, a mirror, water-based lubricant and towels available. Wash your hands and the dilators with warm soapy water, rinse well and dry on a clean towel. Use a water-based lubricant to moisten the rounded end of the dilators. Water-based lubricants are available over-the-counter. Do not use oil-based lubricants, such as petroleum jelly or baby oil. These can irritate the vagina. Find a comfortable position in bed or elsewhere. Use pillows to support your back and thighs as you lean back to a 45-degree angle. Start your dilation session with the smallest dilator. Hold a mirror in one hand. Use the other hand to find the opening of your vagina. Separate the skin. Relax through your hips, abdomen and pelvic floor. Take slow, deep breaths. Position the rounded end of the dilator with the lubricant at the opening to your vaginal canal. The rounded end should point toward your back. Insert the dilator. Go slowly and gently. Think of its path as a gentle curving swoop. The dilator doesn't go straight in. It follows the natural curve of the vaginal canal. Keep gentle down and inward pressure on the dilator as you insert it. Stop when the dilator's rounded end reaches the end of your vaginal canal. The dilators have dots or markers that measure depth. Hold the dilator in place in your vaginal canal. Use gentle but constant inward pressure for the correct amount of time at the right depth for you. If you're feeling pain, breathe and relax the muscles. When time is up, slowly remove the dilator, then repeat with the other dilators you need to use. Wash the dilators and your hands. If you have increased discharge following dilation, you may want to wear a pad to protect your clothing.
Jessi: I mean, it's such a strange, unfamiliar feeling to dilate and to have a dilator, you know to insert a dilator into your own vagina. Because it's not a pleasurable experience, and it's quite painful at first when you start to dilate. It feels much like a foreign body entering and it doesn't feel familiar and your body kind of wants to get it out of there. It's really tough at the beginning, but if you can get through the first month, couple months, it's going to be a lot easier and it's not going to be so much of an emotional and uncomfortable experience.
Narrator: You need to stay on schedule even when traveling. Bring your dilators with you. If your schedule at work creates challenges, ask your health care team if some of your dilation sessions can be done overnight.
Alissa (nurse): You can't skip days now and do more dilation later. You must do dilation on schedule to keep vaginal depth and width. It is important to dilate even if you have pain. Dilation should cause less pain over time.
Jessi: I hear that from a lot of other women that it's an overwhelming experience. There's lots of emotions that are coming through all at once. But at the end of the day for me, it was a very happy experience. I was glad to have the opportunity because that meant that while I have a vagina now, at the end of the day I had a vagina. Yes, it hurts, and it's not pleasant to dilate, but I have the vagina and it's worth it. It's a long process and it's not going to be easy. But you can do it.
Narrator: If you feel dilation may not be working or you have any questions about dilation, please talk with a member of your health care team.
Gender-affirming surgery can have a positive impact on well-being and sexual function. It's important to follow your healthcare professional's advice for long-term care and follow-up after surgery. Continued care after surgery is associated with good outcomes for long-term health.
Before you have surgery, talk with members of your healthcare team about what to expect after surgery and the ongoing care you may need.
Clinical trials
Explore Mayo Clinic studies of tests and procedures to help prevent, detect, treat or manage conditions.
Feminizing surgery care at Mayo Clinic
- Tangpricha V, et al. Transgender women: Evaluation and management. https://www.uptodate.com/ contents/search. Accessed Aug. 16, 2022.
- Erickson-Schroth L, ed. Surgical transition. In: Trans Bodies, Trans Selves: A Resource by and for Transgender Communities. 2nd ed. Kindle edition. Oxford University Press; 2022. Accessed Aug. 17, 2022.
- Coleman E, et al. Standards of care for the health of transgender and gender diverse people, version 8. International Journal of Transgender Health. 2022; doi:10.1080/26895269.2022.2100644.
- AskMayoExpert. Gender-affirming procedures (adult). Mayo Clinic; 2022.
- Nahabedian, M. Implant-based breast reconstruction and augmentation. https://www.uptodate.com/contents/search. Accessed Aug. 17, 2022.
- Erickson-Schroth L, ed. Medical transition. In: Trans Bodies, Trans Selves: A Resource by and for Transgender Communities. 2nd ed. Kindle edition. Oxford University Press; 2022. Accessed Aug. 17, 2022.
- Ferrando C, et al. Gender-affirming surgery: Male to female. https://www.uptodate.com/contents/search. Accessed Aug. 17, 2022.
- Anatomy before and after bowel flap procedure
- Gender dysphoria
- Doctors & Departments
- Care at Mayo Clinic
Mayo Clinic does not endorse companies or products. Advertising revenue supports our not-for-profit mission.
- Opportunities
Mayo Clinic Press
Check out these best-sellers and special offers on books and newsletters from Mayo Clinic Press .
- NEW: Listen to Health Matters Podcast - Mayo Clinic Press NEW: Listen to Health Matters Podcast
- Mayo Clinic on Incontinence - Mayo Clinic Press Mayo Clinic on Incontinence
- The Essential Diabetes Book - Mayo Clinic Press The Essential Diabetes Book
- Mayo Clinic on Hearing and Balance - Mayo Clinic Press Mayo Clinic on Hearing and Balance
- FREE Mayo Clinic Diet Assessment - Mayo Clinic Press FREE Mayo Clinic Diet Assessment
- Mayo Clinic Health Letter - FREE book - Mayo Clinic Press Mayo Clinic Health Letter - FREE book
Your gift holds great power – donate today!
Make your tax-deductible gift and be a part of the cutting-edge research and care that's changing medicine.
- Type 2 Diabetes
- Heart Disease
- Digestive Health
- Multiple Sclerosis
- Diet & Nutrition
- Health Insurance
- Public Health
- Patient Rights
- Caregivers & Loved Ones
- End of Life Concerns
- Health News
- Thyroid Test Analyzer
- Doctor Discussion Guides
- Hemoglobin A1c Test Analyzer
- Lipid Test Analyzer
- Complete Blood Count (CBC) Analyzer
- What to Buy
- Editorial Process
- Meet Our Medical Expert Board
Preparation and Procedures Involved in Gender Affirmation Surgeries
If you or a loved one are considering gender affirmation surgery , you are probably wondering what steps you must go through before the surgery can be done. Let's look at what is required to be a candidate for these surgeries, the potential positive effects and side effects of hormonal therapy, and the types of surgeries that are available.
Gender affirmation surgery, also known as gender confirmation surgery, is performed to align or transition individuals with gender dysphoria to their true gender.
A transgender woman, man, or non-binary person may choose to undergo gender affirmation surgery.
The term "transexual" was previously used by the medical community to describe people who undergo gender affirmation surgery. The term is no longer accepted by many members of the trans community as it is often weaponized as a slur. While some trans people do identify as "transexual", it is best to use the term "transgender" to describe members of this community.
Transitioning
Transitioning may involve:
- Social transitioning : going by different pronouns, changing one’s style, adopting a new name, etc., to affirm one’s gender
- Medical transitioning : taking hormones and/or surgically removing or modifying genitals and reproductive organs
Transgender individuals do not need to undergo medical intervention to have valid identities.
Reasons for Undergoing Surgery
Many transgender people experience a marked incongruence between their gender and their assigned sex at birth. The American Psychiatric Association (APA) has identified this as gender dysphoria.
Gender dysphoria is the distress some trans people feel when their appearance does not reflect their gender. Dysphoria can be the cause of poor mental health or trigger mental illness in transgender people.
For these individuals, social transitioning, hormone therapy, and gender confirmation surgery permit their outside appearance to match their true gender.
Steps Required Before Surgery
In addition to a comprehensive understanding of the procedures, hormones, and other risks involved in gender-affirming surgery, there are other steps that must be accomplished before surgery is performed. These steps are one way the medical community and insurance companies limit access to gender affirmative procedures.
Steps may include:
- Mental health evaluation : A mental health evaluation is required to look for any mental health concerns that could influence an individual’s mental state, and to assess a person’s readiness to undergo the physical and emotional stresses of the transition.
- Clear and consistent documentation of gender dysphoria
- A "real life" test : The individual must take on the role of their gender in everyday activities, both socially and professionally (known as “real-life experience” or “real-life test”).
Firstly, not all transgender experience physical body dysphoria. The “real life” test is also very dangerous to execute, as trans people have to make themselves vulnerable in public to be considered for affirmative procedures. When a trans person does not pass (easily identified as their gender), they can be clocked (found out to be transgender), putting them at risk for violence and discrimination.
Requiring trans people to conduct a “real-life” test despite the ongoing violence out transgender people face is extremely dangerous, especially because some transgender people only want surgery to lower their risk of experiencing transphobic violence.
Hormone Therapy & Transitioning
Hormone therapy involves taking progesterone, estrogen, or testosterone. An individual has to have undergone hormone therapy for a year before having gender affirmation surgery.
The purpose of hormone therapy is to change the physical appearance to reflect gender identity.
Effects of Testosterone
When a trans person begins taking testosterone , changes include both a reduction in assigned female sexual characteristics and an increase in assigned male sexual characteristics.
Bodily changes can include:
- Beard and mustache growth
- Deepening of the voice
- Enlargement of the clitoris
- Increased growth of body hair
- Increased muscle mass and strength
- Increase in the number of red blood cells
- Redistribution of fat from the breasts, hips, and thighs to the abdominal area
- Development of acne, similar to male puberty
- Baldness or localized hair loss, especially at the temples and crown of the head
- Atrophy of the uterus and ovaries, resulting in an inability to have children
Behavioral changes include:
- Aggression
- Increased sex drive
Effects of Estrogen
When a trans person begins taking estrogen , changes include both a reduction in assigned male sexual characteristics and an increase in assigned female characteristics.
Changes to the body can include:
- Breast development
- Loss of erection
- Shrinkage of testicles
- Decreased acne
- Decreased facial and body hair
- Decreased muscle mass and strength
- Softer and smoother skin
- Slowing of balding
- Redistribution of fat from abdomen to the hips, thighs, and buttocks
- Decreased sex drive
- Mood swings
When Are the Hormonal Therapy Effects Noticed?
The feminizing effects of estrogen and the masculinizing effects of testosterone may appear after the first couple of doses, although it may be several years before a person is satisfied with their transition. This is especially true for breast development.
Timeline of Surgical Process
Surgery is delayed until at least one year after the start of hormone therapy and at least two years after a mental health evaluation. Once the surgical procedures begin, the amount of time until completion is variable depending on the number of procedures desired, recovery time, and more.
Transfeminine Surgeries
Transfeminine is an umbrella term inclusive of trans women and non-binary trans people who were assigned male at birth.
Most often, surgeries involved in gender affirmation surgery are broken down into those that occur above the belt (top surgery) and those below the belt (bottom surgery). Not everyone undergoes all of these surgeries, but procedures that may be considered for transfeminine individuals are listed below.
Top surgery includes:
- Breast augmentation
- Facial feminization
- Nose surgery: Rhinoplasty may be done to narrow the nose and refine the tip.
- Eyebrows: A brow lift may be done to feminize the curvature and position of the eyebrows.
- Jaw surgery: The jaw bone may be shaved down.
- Chin reduction: Chin reduction may be performed to soften the chin's angles.
- Cheekbones: Cheekbones may be enhanced, often via collagen injections as well as other plastic surgery techniques.
- Lips: A lip lift may be done.
- Alteration to hairline
- Male pattern hair removal
- Reduction of Adam’s apple
- Voice change surgery
Bottom surgery includes:
- Removal of the penis (penectomy) and scrotum (orchiectomy)
- Creation of a vagina and labia
Transmasculine Surgeries
Transmasculine is an umbrella term inclusive of trans men and non-binary trans people who were assigned female at birth.
Surgery for this group involves top surgery and bottom surgery as well.
Top surgery includes :
- Subcutaneous mastectomy/breast reduction surgery.
- Removal of the uterus and ovaries
- Creation of a penis and scrotum either through metoidioplasty and/or phalloplasty
Complications and Side Effects
Surgery is not without potential risks and complications. Estrogen therapy has been associated with an elevated risk of blood clots ( deep vein thrombosis and pulmonary emboli ) for transfeminine people. There is also the potential of increased risk of breast cancer (even without hormones, breast cancer may develop).
Testosterone use in transmasculine people has been associated with an increase in blood pressure, insulin resistance, and lipid abnormalities, though it's not certain exactly what role these changes play in the development of heart disease.
With surgery, there are surgical risks such as bleeding and infection, as well as side effects of anesthesia . Those who are considering these treatments should have a careful discussion with their doctor about potential risks related to hormone therapy as well as the surgeries.
Cost of Gender Confirmation Surgery
Surgery can be prohibitively expensive for many transgender individuals. Costs including counseling, hormones, electrolysis, and operations can amount to well over $100,000. Transfeminine procedures tend to be more expensive than transmasculine ones. Health insurance sometimes covers a portion of the expenses.
Quality of Life After Surgery
Quality of life appears to improve after gender-affirming surgery for all trans people who medically transition. One 2017 study found that surgical satisfaction ranged from 94% to 100%.
Since there are many steps and sometimes uncomfortable surgeries involved, this number supports the benefits of surgery for those who feel it is their best choice.
A Word From Verywell
Gender affirmation surgery is a lengthy process that begins with counseling and a mental health evaluation to determine if a person can be diagnosed with gender dysphoria.
After this is complete, hormonal treatment is begun with testosterone for transmasculine individuals and estrogen for transfeminine people. Some of the physical and behavioral changes associated with hormonal treatment are listed above.
After hormone therapy has been continued for at least one year, a number of surgical procedures may be considered. These are broken down into "top" procedures and "bottom" procedures.
Surgery is costly, but precise estimates are difficult due to many variables. Finding a surgeon who focuses solely on gender confirmation surgery and has performed many of these procedures is a plus. Speaking to a surgeon's past patients can be a helpful way to gain insight on the physician's practices as well.
For those who follow through with these preparation steps, hormone treatment, and surgeries, studies show quality of life appears to improve. Many people who undergo these procedures express satisfaction with their results.
Bizic MR, Jeftovic M, Pusica S, et al. Gender dysphoria: Bioethical aspects of medical treatment . Biomed Res Int . 2018;2018:9652305. doi:10.1155/2018/9652305
American Psychiatric Association. What is gender dysphoria? . 2016.
The World Professional Association for Transgender Health. Standards of care for the health of transsexual, transgender, and gender-nonconforming people . 2012.
Tomlins L. Prescribing for transgender patients . Aust Prescr . 2019;42(1): 10–13. doi:10.18773/austprescr.2019.003
T'sjoen G, Arcelus J, Gooren L, Klink DT, Tangpricha V. Endocrinology of transgender medicine . Endocr Rev . 2019;40(1):97-117. doi:10.1210/er.2018-00011
Unger CA. Hormone therapy for transgender patients . Transl Androl Urol . 2016;5(6):877-884. doi:10.21037/tau.2016.09.04
Seal LJ. A review of the physical and metabolic effects of cross-sex hormonal therapy in the treatment of gender dysphoria . Ann Clin Biochem . 2016;53(Pt 1):10-20. doi:10.1177/0004563215587763
Schechter LS. Gender confirmation surgery: An update for the primary care provider . Transgend Health . 2016;1(1):32-40. doi:10.1089/trgh.2015.0006
Altman K. Facial feminization surgery: current state of the art . Int J Oral Maxillofac Surg . 2012;41(8):885-94. doi:10.1016/j.ijom.2012.04.024
Therattil PJ, Hazim NY, Cohen WA, Keith JD. Esthetic reduction of the thyroid cartilage: A systematic review of chondrolaryngoplasty . JPRAS Open. 2019;22:27-32. doi:10.1016/j.jpra.2019.07.002
Top H, Balta S. Transsexual mastectomy: Selection of appropriate technique according to breast characteristics . Balkan Med J . 2017;34(2):147-155. doi:10.4274/balkanmedj.2016.0093
Chan W, Drummond A, Kelly M. Deep vein thrombosis in a transgender woman . CMAJ . 2017;189(13):E502-E504. doi:10.1503/cmaj.160408
Streed CG, Harfouch O, Marvel F, Blumenthal RS, Martin SS, Mukherjee M. Cardiovascular disease among transgender adults receiving hormone therapy: A narrative review . Ann Intern Med . 2017;167(4):256-267. doi:10.7326/M17-0577
Hashemi L, Weinreb J, Weimer AK, Weiss RL. Transgender care in the primary care setting: A review of guidelines and literature . Fed Pract . 2018;35(7):30-37.
Van de grift TC, Elaut E, Cerwenka SC, Cohen-kettenis PT, Kreukels BPC. Surgical satisfaction, quality of life, and their association after gender-affirming aurgery: A follow-up atudy . J Sex Marital Ther . 2018;44(2):138-148. doi:10.1080/0092623X.2017.1326190
American Society of Plastic Surgeons. Gender confirmation surgeries .
American Psychological Association. Transgender people, gender identity, and gender expression .
Colebunders B, Brondeel S, D'Arpa S, Hoebeke P, Monstrey S. An update on the surgical treatment for transgender patients . Sex Med Rev . 2017 Jan;5(1):103-109. doi:10.1016/j.sxmr.2016.08.001
IMAGES
VIDEO