Estrogen use in trans-identified males is associated with a wide range of serious health risks—including blood clots, stroke, cancer, infertility, and cognitive decline.

A 2025 review1 summarizes wide-ranging risks tied to estrogen use in trans-identified males:

  • 2.2× higher risk of blood clots (VTE)
  • Up to 10× higher risk of stroke after 6 years on estrogen
  • 1.8× higher all-cause mortality compared to other males
  • 22.5–40.7× higher risk of breast cancer vs. male baseline
  • 3× higher risk of cardiovascular death with estradiol use
  • 72% increase in insulin resistance after 1 year; additional 9% in year 2
  • Reduced brain volume and slower processing speed with long-term use
  • Cognitive decline and elevated depression markers over time
  • Only 0–24% retain sperm production after starting estrogen
  • 6.6× higher incidence of multiple sclerosis
  • Case reports of pancreatitis, autoimmune flare-ups, and brain tumors (meningioma)

The review emphasizes that many of these risks are under-recognized in clinical practice, raising urgent concerns about safety and informed consent.

  1. Schwartz, L., Lal, M., Cohn, J., Mendoza, C. D., & MacMillan, L. (2025). Emerging and accumulating safety signals for the use of estrogen among transgender women. Discover Mental Health5(1), 1-17. [Link] ↩︎
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