← Back to Clinical Trials
Recruiting NCT07400419

NCT07400419 Effects of Resistance Exercise Among TGD Individuals Initiating Estrogen-Based Gender-Affirming Hormone Therapy

◆ AI Clinical Summary
Plain-language summary for patients
Clinical Trial Summary
NCT ID NCT07400419
Status Recruiting
Phase
Sponsor Massachusetts General Hospital
Condition Muscle Mass and Strength
Study Type INTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment 60 participants
Start Date 2026-04-16
Primary Completion 2028-04-01

Trial Parameters

Condition Muscle Mass and Strength
Sponsor Massachusetts General Hospital
Study Type INTERVENTIONAL
Phase N/A
Enrollment 60
Sex MALE
Min Age 18 Years
Max Age N/A
Start Date 2026-04-16
Completion 2028-04-01
Interventions
Resistance Exercise ProgramNutrition and Exercise Counseling

Eligibility Fast-Check

Enter your details for a quick preliminary check. This does not replace medical advice.

Brief Summary

Estrogen-dominant gender-affirming hormone therapy (GAHT) is standard of care for transgender women and gender-diverse individuals and typically consists of estrogen together with anti-androgen/ testosterone therapy. Estrogen and testosterone balance influences fat and muscle mass, muscular strength and the development of sarcopenia. Sarcopenia, a condition characterized by the loss of muscular mass, strength, and function, in turn, is associated with increased mortality and adverse health outcomes. Estrogen-dominant GAHT may have deleterious effects on body composition and muscular performance that place TGD individuals at-risk for sarcopenia. As part of NCT04128488, our investigative team found that appendicular lean mass (ALM)/ height2 decreases after estrogen-based GAHT, thereby portending a higher risk for sarcopenia after GAHT. Early recognition of the changes in body composition and muscular performance leading to sarcopenia are critical, providing potential avenues to intervene and abrogate untoward downstream health effects. A promising intervention is resistance exercise, which has been shown in select populations to improve muscular mass and strength and reduce fat mass, and, thus, mitigate progression to sarcopenia in at-risk populations. For this prospective, pilot clinical trial, investigators will enroll participants who are about to be initiated on estrogen-dominant gender-affirming hormone therapy. Investigators will be randomizing participants 1:1 to either an at-home resistance exercise intervention or no exercise intervention (nutritional and exercise counseling only) for 12 weeks and assess muscle mass, strength, and function both before and after this 12-week period. The exercise intervention group will be provided with the necessary materials to complete the exercise program along with weekly virtual visits with our study team in order to learn their assigned exercises for the week. Further, survey tools will be administered to ascertain whether the resistance exercise intervention may affect gender congruence.

Eligibility Criteria

Inclusion Criteria: * ≥ 18 years * Initiating GAHT with estradiol (oral, sublingual, patch, injection) AND androgen suppression (leuprolide, spironolactone or bicalutamide) * Identifies as either a transgender female/woman, gender-diverse, non-binary, gender non-confirming, gender-fluid, and/or gender-queer * Assigned male sex at birth Exclusion Criteria: * Current condition(s) which may preclude the ability to participate in a resistance exercise program (including but not limited to conditions which may significantly impair mobility and balance) * Current condition(s) where resistance exercise program may be contraindicated (including but not limited to decompensated heart failure, unstable ischemic heart disease, pulmonary hypertension, aortic aneurysm, moderate to severe valvopathies, and/or moderate to severe chronic respiratory insufficiency) * Use of testosterone therapy for \> 1 month in the last 6 months * Use of gender-affirming hormone therapy with androgen/testosterone supp

Related Trials

ClinicalMetric — Independent clinical trial intelligence platform. Not affiliated with NIH, ClinicalTrials.gov, the U.S. FDA, or any pharmaceutical company, hospital, or clinical research organization. Trial data is sourced from ClinicalTrials.gov for informational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Do not make any treatment, enrollment, or health decisions based solely on information found here — always consult a qualified healthcare professional. Full Disclaimer  ·  Last Reviewed: April 2026  ·  Data Methodology