Abstract: | Purpose of ReviewOur objective is to summarize the most recent, high-quality data regarding perioperative recommendations for hysterectomy and salpingo-oophorectomy in transgender and gender nonconforming individuals.Recent FindingsMany transgender men desire hysterectomy and salpingo-oophorectomy for gender affirmation, cancer-risk reduction, pelvic pain, or abnormal uterine bleeding. Gender-confirming hysterectomy is safe, effective, and highly beneficial for well-counseled patients. Preoperative considerations include optimizing the office environment, preoperative testing specific to patients with long-term testosterone use, counseling specific to transgender men, consideration of World Professional Association for Transgender Health criteria, and coordination of a multi-disciplinary team. Minimally invasive approaches, including vaginal, laparoscopic, and robotic-assisted hysterectomy, are the standard of care for cisgender women and transgender men given lower complication rates, better post-operative outcomes, and greater cosmetic satisfaction. Concurrent appendectomy, mastectomy, vaginectomy, and urethral reconstruction may be performed at the time of hysterectomy; phalloplasty and metoidioplasty are generally performed as subsequent procedures. Same-day discharge following hysterectomy is safe and has been shown to improve post-operative outcomes. We recommend follow-up with the patient’s mental health professional and endocrinologist in addition to routine surgical follow-up. Long-term satisfaction after genital surgery appears to be high and regret is low.SummaryMore robust and up to date research is needed to improve guidelines and perioperative care for transgender individuals. Available data suggests that hysterectomy and salpingo-oophorectomy for transgender men is safe, is not associated with any additional risks compared to cisgender women, and is associated with an improved quality of life. |