Don Dizon, MD, on Improving Treatment Strategies for Transgender Patients With Cancer

Article

Don Dizon, MD, FACP, FASCO, discusses the need to improve treatment strategies for transgender patients with cancer.

In an interview with CancerNetwork®, Don Dizon, MD, FACP, FASCO, director of women’s cancers at the Lifespan Cancer Institute, director of medical oncology at Rhode Island Hospital, and professor of medicine at the Warren Alpert Medical School of Brown University in Providence, highlighted that more research needs to be done to determine whether it is safe for transgender patients to continue receiving gender-affirming therapy while being treated for cancer. In particular, patients with endocrine-responsive tumors may be an area of concern, Dizon stated.

Transcript:

[In terms of treatment guidance], parts of it are fairly clearer than others—for example, chemotherapy, which doesn't depend on an endocrine access. It is used in women with cancer, and it's used in situations [for] men with cancer; these are [factors] that don't or shouldn't impact if someone's on gender-affirming hormone therapy; however, it's still important to note that. The bigger area of concern is for those who have those endocrine-responsive tumors. What do you do with the gender-affirming therapy after they've been diagnosed with that hormone-responsive tumor? [For] a woman coming in on combined hormone therapy—estrogen and progesterone—with breast cancer, we are going to recommend she stop hormone therapy. Do you apply that same standard to men or to transgender women on gender-affirming therapy? No one really knows. But what we do have is data from population studies in Europe, for example, that show people on gender-assigned hormone therapies don't seem to have an increased risk of cancers on those therapies.

What we need to do is collect the data. At its most basic, we need to select what types of gender-affirming therapy transgender people are on and the duration. Then in terms of what to do with our therapies beyond that, I think we need to [determine] how they are doing on those treatments. I am loath to say that they should be recommended to stop without any data at all saying their survival is negatively impacted. It's important to say that, because you're asking people to choose [between] life with the threat of cancer coming back, or life with a lower threat of cancer coming back, but as the gender they don't see themselves as. That's a huge thing.

Recent Videos
Trials at scale can be conducted in middle-income, low-middle-income, and even lower-income countries if you organize a trial ecosystem.
For example, you have a belt of certain diseases or genetic disorders that you come across, such as sickle cell disease or thalassemia, that are more prevalent in these areas.
Talent shortages in the manufacturing and administration of cellular therapies are problems that must be addressed at the level of each country.
Point-of-care manufacturing, scalable manufacturing, and bringing the cost down [can help].
A novel cancer database may assist patients determine what clinical trials they are eligible to enroll on and identify the next best steps for treatment.
A consolidated database may allow providers to access information on a patient’s prior treatments and genetic abnormalities all in 1 place.
A study presented at ASTRO 2025 evaluated the feasibility of using a unified cancer database to consolidate information gathered across 14 institutions.
Co-hosts Kristie L. Kahl and Andrew Svonavec highlight what to look forward to at the 2025 ESMO Annual Congress, from hot topics and emerging trends to travel recommendations.
Physical therapists may play a key role in patient care before, during, and after treatment for cancer, according to Alison Ankiewicz, PT, DPT.
Related Content