PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Addition of progesterone leads to increased breast growth for those taking gender-affirming hormones

2025-09-05
(Press-News.org) The addition of the hormone progesterone to gender-affirming hormone therapy leads to increased breast growth for transgender people following feminising hormone therapy. This is demonstrated by an Amsterdam UMC-led trial among 90 participants and these results are presented today at the European Professional Association for Transgender Health (EPATH) annual congress in Hamburg.

"Our results show that progesterone is safe and effective for transgender people. We're now able to prescribe it, in a trial setting, for those who have been taking oestradiol for at least year. We hope that our findings lead to better hormone treatments for transgender individuals,” says Koen Dreijerink, endocrinologist at Amsterdam UMC.

Gender-affirming hormone therapy helps an individual's body better align with their gender identity. In the case of feminising hormone therapy this involves blocking the action of testosterone and the addition of oestradiol. Traditionally, any breast growth is then limited, leading many transgender people to ultimately opt for breast augmentation surgery.

Breast Growth

Alongside oestradiol, progesterone is one of the two key female sex hormones. Progesterone is known in cis women to also cause breast growth. However, progesterone has not been prescribed in transgender people due to a lack of evidence of its effectiveness and safety. In order to gain more information of the effect on breast volume as well as the safety of progesterone, Dreijerink and his colleagues conducted a randomly controlled trail between 2021 and 2024.

"Among our 90 participants we repeatedly used 3D-scanning techniques to measure breast volume and saw up to an increase of 37%. Crucially, we also saw that the study participants were more satisfied with the size, shape and the growth of their breasts,” adds Raya Geels, PhD candidate at Amsterdam UMC and the study’s first author.

The largest increase was seen in the group who also increased their oestradiol dosage with some frequent side effects such as short-lasting tiredness, breast and nipple sensitivity and mood swings.

Participants in the study used progesterone for a year. “The reason we're moving forward with prescribing this in a research setting is to learn about the long-term effects and side-effects, for example we know that progesterone causes drowsiness so we advised our participants to take it prior to sleeping” adds Dreijerink. “It's important that we keep learning about the effects of gender affirming hormone therapy”.

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Developing a stable and high-performance W-CoMnP electrocatalyst by mitigating the Jahn-Teller effect through W doping strategy

2025-09-05
Recently, a research team led by Professor Ge Lei from China University of Petroleum (Beijing) developed a simple template-free method to prepare cobalt-based and manganese-based precursors, and then doped W during the synthesis of transition bimetallic phosphides to obtain the W-doped bimetallic phosphides. The resulting catalyst exhibits excellent bifunctionality and can can be utilized as an electrode in anion exchange membrane (AEM) water electrolyzers. The research results have been published in the Chinese Journal of Catalysis. W-CoMnP exhibits excellent oxygen evolution reaction (OER) and hydrogen evolution reaction (HER) performance, with relatively low overpotentials ...

Manipulating the dispersion of terahertz plasmon polaritons in topological insulator meta-elements

2025-09-05
In the present era of modern nano-technologies, controlling light at the smallest scales is the key to faster communications, ultra-sensitive sensors, and revolutionary imaging systems. This is where Dirac plasmon polaritons (DPPs) come into play—exotic waves that blend light and electron motion in ultra-thin, two-dimensional materials.   Unlike ordinary light waves, which are limited by the speed of light in free space, DPPs can squeeze light into spaces a hundred times smaller than its natural wavelength. This makes them incredibly ...

New Barkhausen noise measurement system unlocks key to efficient power electronics

2025-09-05
Soft magnetic materials can be easily magnetized and demagnetized, which makes them a key component in electrical power devices, such as generators, transformers, and amplifiers. As power electronics advance toward high-frequency operation, demand is growing for low-loss soft magnetic materials. The efficiency of these materials is fundamentally limited by iron loss, where energy is lost as heat when a varying magnetic field passes through them, as is typical in transformers and generators. Iron loss mainly consists of hysteresis loss, classical eddy current loss, and excess eddy current loss. Among these, excess eddy current loss becomes increasingly dominant ...

Novel accurate approach improves understanding of brain structure in children with ADHD

2025-09-05
Over five percent of children and adolescents are diagnosed with attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) globally. This condition is characterized by a short attention span, hyperactivity or impulsive behavior that is age-inappropriate, making it difficult for patients to navigate interpersonal relationships, the formal education system, and social life. Researchers have used brain imaging analyses such as magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) to understand the neurological basis of ADHD. Understanding brain structure abnormalities that lead to ADHD-related pathologies is crucial for designing early assessment and intervention systems, especially for children. Although ...

New clinical trial to test sensory prostheses for people with upper-limb loss

2025-09-05
CLEVELAND—Technology developed at Case Western Reserve University can restore a sense of touch that makes a prosthetic hand feel like a part of one’s own body instead of feeling artificial and disconnected. Now this technology will take a major step toward commercialization: in a new clinical trial, 12 people with upper limb amputation will be recruited to compare standard prosthetic arms and hands to the sensory-enabled neural-controlled prostheses developed at the university since 2015. Researchers at Case Western Reserve ...

New study shows proactive forest management reduces high severity wildfire by 88% and stabilizes carbon during extreme droughts

2025-09-05
Truckee, CA (5 September 2025) -- New research finds that treated forests are 88% less susceptible to high severity wildfire than their unmanaged counterparts, and can recover carbon stocks in only 7 years. The findings, carried out by researchers at Vibrant Planet, Northern Arizona University, American Forest Foundation, and Blue Forest, make the case for more proactive forest management across the US, and specifically, the increasingly wildfire-prone West. Read the publication in Frontiers in Forests and Global ...

Teen loneliness triggers ‘reward seeking’ behaviour

2025-09-05
A study has found that adolescents become highly motivated to seek rewards after just a few hours of social isolation. This may be beneficial in driving them towards social interaction, but when opportunities for connection are limited could lead them to pursue less healthy rewards like alcohol or drugs. When we feel socially isolated, our brain motivates us to seek rewards. Current theory holds that this is a beneficial evolutionary adaptation to help us reconnect with others. The University of Cambridge-led study found that people in their late teens are very sensitive ...

How fast mRNA degrades linked to autoimmune disease risk

2025-09-05
A pizza shop with 30 delivery people ought to be able to deliver a lot of pizzas — if their cars don’t break down on the way. Likewise, genes that produce a lot of messenger RNA (mRNA) molecules can build a lot of proteins — if these molecules don’t fall apart before the job gets done. Inside almost every human cell is DNA, a comprehensive instruction manual for building and maintaining the body. Genes in that manual contain the instructions for making proteins. But those instructions must travel from the cell’s nucleus, where the DNA lives, to the outer region of the cell ...

What stiffening lung tissue reveals about the earliest stages of fibrosis

2025-09-05
Fibrosis of the lungs is often a silent disease until it's too late. By the time patients are diagnosed, the scarring of their lung tissue is already advanced, and current treatments offer little more than a slowing of the inevitable. But what if we could understand the very first steps of this disease before irreversible damage sets in? That’s the question Claudia Loebel, Reliance Industries Term Assistant Professor in Bioengineering, and Donia Ahmed, a doctoral student in Loebel’s lab, set out to answer. Their Nature Materials paper, a collaborative study spanning the University of Pennsylvania, the University of Michigan and Drexel University, explores how subtle changes ...

Kessler Foundation’s Trevor Dyson-Hudson, MD, honored with James J. Peters Distinguished Service Award from ASCIP

2025-09-05
East Hanover, NJ – Sept 5, 2025 –Trevor Dyson-Hudson, MD, FASIA, of Kessler Foundation was awarded the prestigious James J. Peters Distinguished Service Award at the 2025 Annual Meeting and Expo of the Academy of Spinal Cord Injury Professionals (ASCIP) in Philadelphia today. He has been recognized for his outstanding contributions and accomplishments in spinal cord injury healthcare and his dedication to excellence in treating SCI patients. Dr. Dyson-Hudson is co-director of the Center for Spinal Cord Injury Research and the Derfner-Lieberman Laboratory for Regenerative ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Tundra tongue: The science behind a very cold mistake

Targeting a dangerous gut infection

Scientists successfully harvest chickpeas from “moon dirt”

Teen aggression a warning sign for faster aging later in life

Study confirms food fortification is highly cost-effective in fighting hidden hunger across 63 countries

Special issue elevates disease ecology in marine management

A kaleidoscope of cosmic collisions: the new catalogue of gravitational signals from LIGO, Virgo and KAGRA

New catalog more than doubles the number of gravitational-wave detections made by LIGO, Virgo, and KAGRA observatories

Antifibrotic drug shows promise for premature ovarian insufficiency

Altered copper metabolism is a crucial factor in inflammatory bone diseases

Real-time imaging of microplastics in the body improves understanding of health risks

Reconstructing the world’s ant diversity in 3D

UMD entomologist helps bring the world’s ant diversity to life in 3D imagery

ESA’s Mars orbiters watch solar superstorm hit the Red Planet

The secret lives of catalysts: How microscopic networks power reactions

Molecular ‘catapult’ fires electrons at the limits of physics

Researcher finds evidence supporting sucrose can help manage painful procedures in infants

New study identifies key factors supporting indigenous well-being

Bureaucracy Index 2026: Business sector hit hardest

ECMWF’s portable global forecasting model OpenIFS now available for all

Yale study challenges notion that aging means decline, finds many older adults improve over time

Korean researchers enable early detection of brain disorders with a single drop of saliva!

Swipe right, but safer

Duke-NUS scientists identify more effective way to detect poultry viruses in live markets

Low-intensity treadmill exercise preconditioning mitigates post-stroke injury in mouse models

How moss helped solve a grave-robbing mystery

How much sleep do teens get? Six-seven hours.

Patients regain weight rapidly after stopping weight loss drugs – but still keep off a quarter of weight lost

GLP-1 diabetes drugs linked to reduced risk of addiction and substance-related death

Councils face industry legal threats for campaigns warning against wood burning stoves

[Press-News.org] Addition of progesterone leads to increased breast growth for those taking gender-affirming hormones