A gender affirmation surgery allows individuals, such as those who identify as transgender or nonbinary, to change one or more of their sex characteristics. This type of procedure offers a person the opportunity to have features that align with their gender identity.
For example, this type of surgery may be a transgender surgery like a male-to-female or female-to-male surgery. Read on to learn more about what masculinizing, feminizing, and gender-nullification surgeries may involve, including potential risks and complications.
Why Is Gender Affirmation Surgery Performed?
A person may have gender affirmation surgery for different reasons. They may choose to have the surgery so their physical features and functional ability align more closely with their gender identity.
For example, one study found that 48,019 people underwent gender affirmation surgeries between 2016 and 2020. Most procedures were breast- and chest-related, while the remaining procedures concerned genital reconstruction or facial and cosmetic procedures.
In some cases, surgery may be medically necessary to treat dysphoria. Dysphoria refers to the distress that transgender people may experience when their gender identity doesn't match their sex assigned at birth. One study found that people with gender dysphoria who had gender affirmation surgeries experienced:
- Decreased antidepressant use
- Decreased anxiety, depression, and suicidal ideation
- Decreased alcohol and drug abuse
However, these surgeries are only performed if appropriate for a person's case. The appropriateness comes about as a result of consultations with mental health professionals and healthcare providers.
Transgender vs Nonbinary
Transgender and nonbinary people can get gender affirmation surgeries. However, there are some key ways that these gender identities differ.
Transgender is a term that refers to people who have gender identities that aren't the same as their assigned sex at birth. Identifying as nonbinary means that a person doesn't identify only as a man or a woman. A nonbinary individual may consider themselves to be:
- Both a man and a woman
- Neither a man nor a woman
- An identity between or beyond a man or a woman
Gender-Fluid: What It Means
Hormone Therapy
Gender-affirming hormone therapy uses sex hormones and hormone blockers to help align the person's physical appearance with their gender identity. For example, some people may take masculinizing hormones.
"They start growing hair, their voice deepens, they get more muscle mass," Heidi Wittenberg, MD, medical director of the Gender Institute at Saint Francis Memorial Hospital in San Francisco and director of MoZaic Care Inc., which specializes in gender-related genital, urinary, and pelvic surgeries, told Health.
Types of hormone therapy include:
- Masculinizing hormone therapy uses testosterone. This helps to suppress the menstrual cycle, grow facial and body hair, increase muscle mass, and promote other male secondary sex characteristics.
- Feminizing hormone therapy includes estrogens and testosterone blockers. These medications promote breast growth, slow the growth of body and facial hair, increase body fat, shrink the testicles, and decrease erectile function.
- Non-binary hormone therapy is typically tailored to the individual and may include female or male sex hormones and/or hormone blockers.
It can include oral or topical medications, injections, a patch you wear on your skin, or a drug implant. The therapy is also typically recommended before gender affirmation surgery unless hormone therapy is medically contraindicated or not desired by the individual.
Masculinizing Surgeries
Masculinizing surgeries can include top surgery, bottom surgery, or both. Common trans male surgeries include:
- Chest masculinization (breast tissue removal and areola and nipple repositioning/reshaping)
- Hysterectomy (uterus removal)
- Metoidioplasty (lengthening the clitoris and possibly extending the urethra)
- Oophorectomy (ovary removal)
- Phalloplasty (surgery to create a penis)
- Scrotoplasty (surgery to create a scrotum)
Top Surgery
Chest masculinization surgerychest masculinization surgeries
- Double-incision approach: Used to remove moderate to large amounts of breast tissue, this surgery involves two horizontal incisions below the breast to remove breast tissue and accentuate the contours of pectoral muscles. The nipples and areolas are removed and, in many cases, resized, reshaped, and replaced.
-
Short scar top surgery: For people with smaller breasts and firm skin, the procedure involves a small incision along the lower half of the areola to remove breast tissue. The nipple and areola may be resized before closing the incision.
Metoidioplasty
Some trans men elect to do metoidioplasty, also called a meta, which involves lengthening the clitoris to create a small penis. Both a penis and a clitoris are made of the same type of tissue and experience similar sensations.
Before metoidioplasty, testosterone therapy may be used to enlarge the clitoris. The procedure can be completed in one surgery, which may also include:
- Constructing a glans (head) to look more like a penis
- Extending the urethra (the tube urine passes through), which allows the person to urinate while standing
- Creating a scrotum (scrotoplasty) from labia majora tissue
Phalloplasty
Other trans menseveral procedures
The first and most challenging step is to harvest tissue from another part of the body, often the forearm or back, along with an artery and vein or two, to create the phallus, Nicholas Kim, MD, assistant professor in the division of plastic and reconstructive surgery in the department of surgery at the University of Minnesota Medical School in Minneapolis, told Health.
Those structures are reconnected under an operative microscope using very fine sutures—"thinner than our hair," said Dr. Kim. That surgery alone can take six to eight hours, he added.
In a separate operation, called urethral reconstruction, the surgeons connect the urinary system to the new structure so that urine can pass through it, said Dr. Kim. Urethral reconstruction, however, has a high rate of complications, which include fistulas or strictures.
According to Dr. Kim, some trans men prefer to skip that step, especially if standing to urinate is not a priority. People who want to have penetrative sex will also need prosthesis implant surgery.
Hysterectomy and Oophorectomy
Masculinizing surgeryDr. Wittenberg
Many also opt for an oophorectomy to remove the ovaries, almond-shaped organs on either side of the uterus that contain eggs and produce female sex hormones. In this case, oocytes (eggs) can be extracted and stored for a future surrogate pregnancy, if desired. However, this is a highly personal decision, and some trans men choose to keep their uterus to preserve fertility.
Feminizing Surgeries
Surgeries are often used to feminize facial features, enhance breast size and shape, reduce the size of an Adam’s apple, and reconstruct genitals. Feminizing surgeries can include:
- Breast augmentation
- Facial feminization surgery
- Penis removal (penectomy)
- Scrotum removal (scrotectomy)
- Testicle removal (orchiectomy)
- Tracheal shave (chondrolaryngoplasty) to reduce an Adam's apple
- Vaginoplasty
- Voice feminization
Breast Augmentation
Top surgery, also known as breast augmentation or breast mammoplasty, is often used to increase breast size for a more feminine appearance. The procedure can involve placing breast implants, tissue expanders, or fat from other parts of the body under the chest tissue.
Breast augmentation can significantly improve gender dysphoria. Studies show most people who undergo top surgery are happier, more satisfied with their chest, and would undergo the surgery again.
Most surgeons recommend 12 months of feminizing hormone therapy before breast augmentation. Since hormone therapy itself can lead to breast tissue development, transgender women may or may not decide to have surgical breast augmentation.
Facial Feminization and Adam's Apple Removal
Facial feminization surgeryplastic surgery procedures
Some trans women opt for chondrolaryngoplasty, also known as a tracheal shave. The procedure reduces the size of the Adam's apple, an area of cartilage around the larynx (voice box) that tends to be larger in people assigned male at birth.
Vulvoplasty and Vaginoplasty
As for bottom surgery, there are various feminizing procedures from which to choose. Vulvoplasty (to create external genitalia without a vagina) or vaginoplasty (to create a vulva and vaginal canal) are two of the most common procedures.
Dr. Wittenberg noted that people might undergo six to 12 months of electrolysis or laser hair removal before surgery to remove pubic hair from the skin that will be used for the vaginal lining.
Surgeons have different techniques for creating a vaginal canal. A common one is a penile inversion, where the masculine structures are emptied and inverted into a created cavity, explained Dr. Kim. Vaginoplasty may be done in one or two stages, said Dr. Wittenberg, and the initial recovery is three months—but it will be a full year until people see results.
Penectomy
Surgical removalfeminization treatment
However, a total penectomy is not commonly used in feminizing surgeries. Instead, many people opt for penile-inversion surgery, a technique that hollows out the penis and repurposes the tissue to create a vagina during vaginoplasty.
Orchiectomy and Scrotectomy
An orchiectomy is a surgery to remove the testicles—male reproductive organs that produce sperm. Scrotectomy is surgery to remove the scrotum, that sac just below the penis that holds the testicles.
However, some people opt to retain the scrotum. Scrotum skin can be used in vulvoplasty or vaginoplasty, surgeries to construct a vulva or vagina.
Other Surgical Options
Some gender non-conforming peopleother types
- Gender nullification procedures
- Penile preservation vaginoplasty
- Vaginal preservation phalloplasty
Gender Nullification
People who are agender or asexual may opt for gender nullification, sometimes called nullo. This involves the removal of all sex organs. The external genitalia is removed, leaving an opening for urine to pass and creating a smooth transition from the abdomen to the groin.
Depending on the person's sex assigned at birth, nullification surgeries can include:
- Breast tissue removal
- Hysterectomy (uterus removal)
- Nipple and areola augmentation or removal
- Oophorectomy (ovary removal)
- Penis removal (penectomy)
- Scrotum removal (scrotectomy)
- Testicle removal (orchiectomy)
- Tracheal shave (chondrolaryngoplasty) to reduce an Adam's apple
Penile Preservation Vaginoplasty
Some gender non-conforming people assigned male at birth want a vagina but also want to preserve their penis, said Dr. Wittenberg. Often, that involves taking skin from the lining of the abdomen to create a vagina with full depth.
Vaginal Preservation Phalloplasty
Alternatively, a patient assigned female at birth can undergo phalloplasty (surgery to create a penis) and retain the vaginal opening. Known as vaginal preservation phalloplasty, it is often used as a way to resolve gender dysphoria while retaining fertility.
What Is Gender-Affirming Medical Care?
Recovery
The recovery time for a gender affirmation surgery will depend on the type of surgery performed. For example, healing for facial surgeries may last for weeks, while transmasculine bottom surgery healing may take months.
Your recovery process may also include additional treatments or therapies. Mental health support and pelvic floor physiotherapy are a few options that may be needed or desired during recovery.
Risks and Complications
The risk and complications of gender affirmation surgeries will vary depending on which surgeries you have. Common risks across procedures could include:
- Anesthesia risks
- Bleeding
- Hematoma, which is bad bruising
- Pain
- Poor incision healing
Complications from these procedures may be:
- Acute kidney injury
- Blood transfusion
- Deep vein thrombosis, which is blood clot formation
- Pneumonia
- Pulmonary embolism, blood vessel blockage for vessels going to the lung
- Rectovaginal fistula, which is a connection between two body parts—in this case, the rectum and vagina
- Sepsis
- Surgical site infection
- Urethral stricture or stenosis, which is when the urethra narrows
- Urinary tract infection (UTI)
- Wound disruption
What To Consider
It's important to note that an individual does not need surgery to transition. If the person has surgery, it is usually only one part of the transition process.
There's also psychotherapy. People may find it helpful to work through the negative mental health effects of dysphoria. Typically, people seeking gender affirmation surgery must be evaluated by a qualified mental health professional to obtain a referral.
Some people may find that living in their preferred gender is all that's needed to ease their dysphoria. Doing so for one full year prior is a prerequisite for many surgeries.
All in all, the entire transition process—living as your identified gender, obtaining mental health referrals, getting insurance approvals, taking hormones, going through hair removal, and having various surgeries—can take years, healthcare providers explained.
A Quick Review
Whether you're in the process of transitioning or supporting someone who is, it's important to be informed about gender affirmation surgeries. Gender affirmation procedures often involve multiple surgeries, which can be masculinizing, feminizing, or gender-nullifying in nature.
It is a highly personalized process that looks different for each person and can often take several months or years. The procedures also vary regarding risks and complications, so consultations with healthcare providers and mental health professionals are essential before having these procedures.
Was this page helpful?