Growing up with clitoromegaly: experiences of North American women with congenital adrenal hyperplasia
To describe experiences of clitoromegaly in women with congenital adrenal hyperplasia (CAH). CAH females (46XX, ≥16 years old) from the United States and Canada were eligible for a cross-sectional online survey (2019–2020) if reporting clitoromegaly (life-long: “growing up with a larger than average...
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Published in | Journal of pediatric urology Vol. 18; no. 6; pp. 775 - 783 |
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Main Authors | , , , , , |
Format | Journal Article |
Language | English |
Published |
England
Elsevier Ltd
01.12.2022
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Subjects | |
Online Access | Get full text |
ISSN | 1477-5131 1873-4898 1873-4898 |
DOI | 10.1016/j.jpurol.2022.05.016 |
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Abstract | To describe experiences of clitoromegaly in women with congenital adrenal hyperplasia (CAH).
CAH females (46XX, ≥16 years old) from the United States and Canada were eligible for a cross-sectional online survey (2019–2020) if reporting clitoromegaly (life-long: “growing up with a larger than average clitoris,” secondary: “clitoris grew over weeks or months”). A multidisciplinary team and women with CAH drafted questions assessing net effects of clitoromegaly on 10 activities and 10 life domains. Fisher's exact test was used to compare net effect (positive-negative) vs. no effect (Bonferroni p = 0.05/10 = 0.005).
Of 97 women with CAH enrolled, 53 women (55%, median age: 36 years, advocacy group recruitment: 81%) reported recognizing clitoromegaly at median 11–13 years old, with 21% identifying it in adulthood. There was no difference in self-reported timing or clitoral shape between life-long or secondary clitoromegaly (p ≥ 0.06). There were no net positive effects of clitoromegaly. Rather, clitoromegaly had net negative effects on 7/10 activities (p ≤ 0.003) and no net effect (neutral) on 3 (Table). Women were less likely to wear tight clothing, change clothes in public locker rooms and play group sports. Women reported net negative effects for most romantic activities (dating, any sexual activity, pain-free sexual activity, having a partner see their genitalia, p=<0.003), but did not report a net effect on pleasurable sexual activity (p = 0.12).
Clitoromegaly had net negative effects in 9/10 life domains (p < 0.001) and neutral on job self-perception (p = 0.25). Few women reported any positive impact (2–6%). However, 49–59% of women experienced poor self-esteem, anxiety, gender self-perception and body image, while 36% felt “down or depressed.” Also, 21–23% experienced negative self-perception as friends and parents, 42–47% reported negative effects on plans for romantic and sexual relationships. Responses did not differ with advocacy group membership (p ≥ 0.02).
Our findings support qualitative and case series evidence that clitoromegaly has a negative psychological outcome on women with CAH. Clitoromegaly may add to the burden of living with a chronic endocrine disease. Women with positive and negative experiences had the same opportunity to participate. Since we could not assess objective clitoral size, baseline virilization and exact nature of any childhood clitoral procedures, these data cannot be used to estimate the impact of specific clitoral size or effectiveness of early clitoral treatments.
Clitoromegaly appears to be common among women with CAH. While experiences of clitoromegaly vary between women, the overall experience is negative in multiple social, romantic, and emotional activities and domains. |
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AbstractList | SummaryIntroductionTo describe experiences of clitoromegaly in women with congenial adrenal hyperplasia (CAH). MethodsCAH females (46XX, >=16 years old) from the United States and Canada were eligible for a cross-sectional online survey (2019-2020) if reporting clitoromegaly (life-long: “growing up with a larger than average clitoris,” secondary: “clitoris grew over weeks or months”). A multidisciplinary team and women with CAH drafted questions assessing net effects of clitoromegaly on 10 activities and 10 life domains. Fisher’s exact test was used to compare net effect (positive-negative) vs. no effect (Bonferroni p=0.05/10=0.005). ResultsOf 97 women with CAH enrolled, 53 women (55%, median age: 36 years, advocacy group recruitment: 81%) reported recognizing clitoromegaly at median 11-13 years old, with 21% identifying it in adulthood. There was no difference in self-reported timing or clitoral shape between life-long or secondary clitoromegaly (p>=0.06). There were no net positive effects of clitoromegaly. Rather, clitoromegaly had net negative effects on 7/10 activities (p<=0.003) and no net effect (neutral) on 3 ( Table). Women were less likely to wear tight clothing, change clothes in public locker rooms and play group sports. Women reported net negative effects for most romantic activities (dating, any sexual activity, pain-free sexual activity, having a partner see their genitalia, p=<0.003), but did not report a net effect on pleasurable sexual activity (p=0.12). Clitoromegaly had net negative effects in 9/10 life domains (p<0.001) and neutral on job self-perception (p=0.25). Few women reported any positive impact (2-6%). However, 49-59% of women experienced poor self-esteem, anxiety, gender self-perception and body image, while 36% felt “down or depressed.” A 21-23% experienced negative self-perception as friends and parents, 42-47% reported negative effects on plans for romantic and sexual relationships. Responses did not differ with advocacy group membership (p>=0.02). DiscussionOur findings support qualitative and case series evidence that clitoromegaly has a negative psychological outcome on women with CAH. Clitoromegaly may add to the burden of living with a chronic endocrine disease. Women with positive and negative experiences had the same opportunity to participate. Since we could not assess objective clitoral size, baseline virilization and exact nature of any childhood clitoral procedures, these data cannot be used to estimate the impact of specific clitoral size or effectiveness of early clitoral treatments. ConclusionsClitoromegaly appears to be common among women with CAH. While experiences of clitoromegaly vary between women, the overall experience is negative in multiple social, romantic, and emotional activities and domains. To describe experiences of clitoromegaly in women with congenital adrenal hyperplasia (CAH). CAH females (46XX, ≥16 years old) from the United States and Canada were eligible for a cross-sectional online survey (2019-2020) if reporting clitoromegaly (life-long: "growing up with a larger than average clitoris," secondary: "clitoris grew over weeks or months"). A multidisciplinary team and women with CAH drafted questions assessing net effects of clitoromegaly on 10 activities and 10 life domains. Fisher's exact test was used to compare net effect (positive-negative) vs. no effect (Bonferroni p = 0.05/10 = 0.005). Of 97 women with CAH enrolled, 53 women (55%, median age: 36 years, advocacy group recruitment: 81%) reported recognizing clitoromegaly at median 11-13 years old, with 21% identifying it in adulthood. There was no difference in self-reported timing or clitoral shape between life-long or secondary clitoromegaly (p ≥ 0.06). There were no net positive effects of clitoromegaly. Rather, clitoromegaly had net negative effects on 7/10 activities (p ≤ 0.003) and no net effect (neutral) on 3 (Table). Women were less likely to wear tight clothing, change clothes in public locker rooms and play group sports. Women reported net negative effects for most romantic activities (dating, any sexual activity, pain-free sexual activity, having a partner see their genitalia, p=<0.003), but did not report a net effect on pleasurable sexual activity (p = 0.12). Clitoromegaly had net negative effects in 9/10 life domains (p < 0.001) and neutral on job self-perception (p = 0.25). Few women reported any positive impact (2-6%). However, 49-59% of women experienced poor self-esteem, anxiety, gender self-perception and body image, while 36% felt "down or depressed." Also, 21-23% experienced negative self-perception as friends and parents, 42-47% reported negative effects on plans for romantic and sexual relationships. Responses did not differ with advocacy group membership (p ≥ 0.02). Our findings support qualitative and case series evidence that clitoromegaly has a negative psychological outcome on women with CAH. Clitoromegaly may add to the burden of living with a chronic endocrine disease. Women with positive and negative experiences had the same opportunity to participate. Since we could not assess objective clitoral size, baseline virilization and exact nature of any childhood clitoral procedures, these data cannot be used to estimate the impact of specific clitoral size or effectiveness of early clitoral treatments. Clitoromegaly appears to be common among women with CAH. While experiences of clitoromegaly vary between women, the overall experience is negative in multiple social, romantic, and emotional activities and domains. To describe experiences of clitoromegaly in women with congenital adrenal hyperplasia (CAH). CAH females (46XX, ≥16 years old) from the United States and Canada were eligible for a cross-sectional online survey (2019–2020) if reporting clitoromegaly (life-long: “growing up with a larger than average clitoris,” secondary: “clitoris grew over weeks or months”). A multidisciplinary team and women with CAH drafted questions assessing net effects of clitoromegaly on 10 activities and 10 life domains. Fisher's exact test was used to compare net effect (positive-negative) vs. no effect (Bonferroni p = 0.05/10 = 0.005). Of 97 women with CAH enrolled, 53 women (55%, median age: 36 years, advocacy group recruitment: 81%) reported recognizing clitoromegaly at median 11–13 years old, with 21% identifying it in adulthood. There was no difference in self-reported timing or clitoral shape between life-long or secondary clitoromegaly (p ≥ 0.06). There were no net positive effects of clitoromegaly. Rather, clitoromegaly had net negative effects on 7/10 activities (p ≤ 0.003) and no net effect (neutral) on 3 (Table). Women were less likely to wear tight clothing, change clothes in public locker rooms and play group sports. Women reported net negative effects for most romantic activities (dating, any sexual activity, pain-free sexual activity, having a partner see their genitalia, p=<0.003), but did not report a net effect on pleasurable sexual activity (p = 0.12). Clitoromegaly had net negative effects in 9/10 life domains (p < 0.001) and neutral on job self-perception (p = 0.25). Few women reported any positive impact (2–6%). However, 49–59% of women experienced poor self-esteem, anxiety, gender self-perception and body image, while 36% felt “down or depressed.” Also, 21–23% experienced negative self-perception as friends and parents, 42–47% reported negative effects on plans for romantic and sexual relationships. Responses did not differ with advocacy group membership (p ≥ 0.02). Our findings support qualitative and case series evidence that clitoromegaly has a negative psychological outcome on women with CAH. Clitoromegaly may add to the burden of living with a chronic endocrine disease. Women with positive and negative experiences had the same opportunity to participate. Since we could not assess objective clitoral size, baseline virilization and exact nature of any childhood clitoral procedures, these data cannot be used to estimate the impact of specific clitoral size or effectiveness of early clitoral treatments. Clitoromegaly appears to be common among women with CAH. While experiences of clitoromegaly vary between women, the overall experience is negative in multiple social, romantic, and emotional activities and domains. To describe experiences of clitoromegaly in women with congenital adrenal hyperplasia (CAH).INTRODUCTIONTo describe experiences of clitoromegaly in women with congenital adrenal hyperplasia (CAH).CAH females (46XX, ≥16 years old) from the United States and Canada were eligible for a cross-sectional online survey (2019-2020) if reporting clitoromegaly (life-long: "growing up with a larger than average clitoris," secondary: "clitoris grew over weeks or months"). A multidisciplinary team and women with CAH drafted questions assessing net effects of clitoromegaly on 10 activities and 10 life domains. Fisher's exact test was used to compare net effect (positive-negative) vs. no effect (Bonferroni p = 0.05/10 = 0.005).METHODSCAH females (46XX, ≥16 years old) from the United States and Canada were eligible for a cross-sectional online survey (2019-2020) if reporting clitoromegaly (life-long: "growing up with a larger than average clitoris," secondary: "clitoris grew over weeks or months"). A multidisciplinary team and women with CAH drafted questions assessing net effects of clitoromegaly on 10 activities and 10 life domains. Fisher's exact test was used to compare net effect (positive-negative) vs. no effect (Bonferroni p = 0.05/10 = 0.005).Of 97 women with CAH enrolled, 53 women (55%, median age: 36 years, advocacy group recruitment: 81%) reported recognizing clitoromegaly at median 11-13 years old, with 21% identifying it in adulthood. There was no difference in self-reported timing or clitoral shape between life-long or secondary clitoromegaly (p ≥ 0.06). There were no net positive effects of clitoromegaly. Rather, clitoromegaly had net negative effects on 7/10 activities (p ≤ 0.003) and no net effect (neutral) on 3 (Table). Women were less likely to wear tight clothing, change clothes in public locker rooms and play group sports. Women reported net negative effects for most romantic activities (dating, any sexual activity, pain-free sexual activity, having a partner see their genitalia, p=<0.003), but did not report a net effect on pleasurable sexual activity (p = 0.12). Clitoromegaly had net negative effects in 9/10 life domains (p < 0.001) and neutral on job self-perception (p = 0.25). Few women reported any positive impact (2-6%). However, 49-59% of women experienced poor self-esteem, anxiety, gender self-perception and body image, while 36% felt "down or depressed." Also, 21-23% experienced negative self-perception as friends and parents, 42-47% reported negative effects on plans for romantic and sexual relationships. Responses did not differ with advocacy group membership (p ≥ 0.02).RESULTSOf 97 women with CAH enrolled, 53 women (55%, median age: 36 years, advocacy group recruitment: 81%) reported recognizing clitoromegaly at median 11-13 years old, with 21% identifying it in adulthood. There was no difference in self-reported timing or clitoral shape between life-long or secondary clitoromegaly (p ≥ 0.06). There were no net positive effects of clitoromegaly. Rather, clitoromegaly had net negative effects on 7/10 activities (p ≤ 0.003) and no net effect (neutral) on 3 (Table). Women were less likely to wear tight clothing, change clothes in public locker rooms and play group sports. Women reported net negative effects for most romantic activities (dating, any sexual activity, pain-free sexual activity, having a partner see their genitalia, p=<0.003), but did not report a net effect on pleasurable sexual activity (p = 0.12). Clitoromegaly had net negative effects in 9/10 life domains (p < 0.001) and neutral on job self-perception (p = 0.25). Few women reported any positive impact (2-6%). However, 49-59% of women experienced poor self-esteem, anxiety, gender self-perception and body image, while 36% felt "down or depressed." Also, 21-23% experienced negative self-perception as friends and parents, 42-47% reported negative effects on plans for romantic and sexual relationships. Responses did not differ with advocacy group membership (p ≥ 0.02).Our findings support qualitative and case series evidence that clitoromegaly has a negative psychological outcome on women with CAH. Clitoromegaly may add to the burden of living with a chronic endocrine disease. Women with positive and negative experiences had the same opportunity to participate. Since we could not assess objective clitoral size, baseline virilization and exact nature of any childhood clitoral procedures, these data cannot be used to estimate the impact of specific clitoral size or effectiveness of early clitoral treatments.DISCUSSIONOur findings support qualitative and case series evidence that clitoromegaly has a negative psychological outcome on women with CAH. Clitoromegaly may add to the burden of living with a chronic endocrine disease. Women with positive and negative experiences had the same opportunity to participate. Since we could not assess objective clitoral size, baseline virilization and exact nature of any childhood clitoral procedures, these data cannot be used to estimate the impact of specific clitoral size or effectiveness of early clitoral treatments.Clitoromegaly appears to be common among women with CAH. While experiences of clitoromegaly vary between women, the overall experience is negative in multiple social, romantic, and emotional activities and domains.CONCLUSIONSClitoromegaly appears to be common among women with CAH. While experiences of clitoromegaly vary between women, the overall experience is negative in multiple social, romantic, and emotional activities and domains. |
Author | Braga, Luis H. Kokorowski, Paul Whittam, Benjamin Hensel, Devon J. Frady, Heather Szymanski, Konrad M. |
Author_xml | – sequence: 1 givenname: Konrad M. surname: Szymanski fullname: Szymanski, Konrad M. email: szymanko@iupui.edu organization: Division of Pediatric Urology, Riley Hospital for Children at IU Health, Indianapolis, IN, USA – sequence: 2 givenname: Paul orcidid: 0000-0003-0751-5595 surname: Kokorowski fullname: Kokorowski, Paul organization: Division of Pediatric Urology, Children’s Hospital Los Angeles, Keck School of Medicine, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, CA, USA – sequence: 3 givenname: Luis H. surname: Braga fullname: Braga, Luis H. organization: Division of Pediatric Urology, McMaster Children’s Hospital, McMaster University, Hamilton, ON, Canada – sequence: 4 givenname: Heather surname: Frady fullname: Frady, Heather organization: Division of Pediatric Urology, Riley Hospital for Children at IU Health, Indianapolis, IN, USA – sequence: 5 givenname: Benjamin orcidid: 0000-0001-6881-5706 surname: Whittam fullname: Whittam, Benjamin organization: Division of Pediatric Urology, Riley Hospital for Children at IU Health, Indianapolis, IN, USA – sequence: 6 givenname: Devon J. surname: Hensel fullname: Hensel, Devon J. organization: Division of Adolescent Medicine, Department of Pediatrics, Indiana University School of Medicine and Department of Sociology, Indiana University Purdue University Indianapolis, Indianapolis, IN, USA |
BackLink | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35752554$$D View this record in MEDLINE/PubMed |
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Keywords | Patient reported outcome measures Congenital DSD Differences of sex development CAH IQR Adrenal hyperplasia adrenal hyperplasia differences of sex development patient reported outcome measures congenital interquartile range congenital adrenal hyperplasia |
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Snippet | To describe experiences of clitoromegaly in women with congenital adrenal hyperplasia (CAH).
CAH females (46XX, ≥16 years old) from the United States and... SummaryIntroductionTo describe experiences of clitoromegaly in women with congenial adrenal hyperplasia (CAH). MethodsCAH females (46XX, >=16 years old) from... To describe experiences of clitoromegaly in women with congenital adrenal hyperplasia (CAH).INTRODUCTIONTo describe experiences of clitoromegaly in women with... |
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SubjectTerms | Adolescent Adrenal hyperplasia Adrenal Hyperplasia, Congenital - complications Adrenal Hyperplasia, Congenital - psychology Adult Child Clitoris Congenital Cross-Sectional Studies Differences of sex development Female Humans Hypertrophy North American People Patient reported outcome measures Pediatrics Urology Virilism - complications |
Title | Growing up with clitoromegaly: experiences of North American women with congenital adrenal hyperplasia |
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