🧵 Dosing recommendations for injectable forms of Estradiol don't seem to line up with the recommended serum hormone ranges, are likely making it harder for providers and patients to achieve ideal hormonal levels, and are likely impacting quality of life. Let's look at what might be going on.
#transhealth
Dosing recommendations for providers comes in multiple places: international standards of care guidance, regional guidance, and practice information. There's also some guidance that happens as a result of "process pollination" from practitioners and their management choosing to adopt various guides. What providers actually prescribe patients comes down to not only the guidance, but also regional drug availability, their experience, and to a lesser extent patient preference/experiences.
Injectable feminising HRT in the global north is largely limited to the USA, parts of Eastern Europe, and Japan. There are exceptions; both Canada and Australia have a very small number of practitioners prescribing, but in both circumstances it's considered much more "off label" and is much more expensive due to insurance. In western Europe it's mostly non-existent, and there seems to be a weird correlation between how regulated/capitalist a given medical system is to it's availability.
When writing guidance on dosing there's a few factors that have to be taken into considering: medication packaging and how doses are dispensed to patients, ease of communication and administration to the patient so they can be consistent in dosing (particularly if they are self-administering), as well as the general rule of titration - use the least amount that's most effective.
Currently WPATH SOC8 aligns itself with the Endocrine Society in terms of both dosing recommendations and target hormonal levels patients should be achieving, which is 100-200 pg/mL (~370-750 pmol/L). It's important to note this is an expected average level, and that throughout the dosing cycle it can go above or below that mark.
With mean levels below that mark patients are at risk of being unable to suppress endogenous production if doing monotherapy or intermittent hormonal starvation, with levels being higher at greater risk of thrombotic events. Higher variation in peak to mean in levels during the dosing cycle can see changes in mood and feelings, particularly towards end of cycle, impacting quality of life.