The h-index of plastic surgeons seems to correlate with academic rank and has potential as a tool to measure academic productivity within plastic surgery. Plastic surgeons on faculty in integrated plastic surgery programs, those at larger programs, and male plastic surgeons tend to have higher h-indices. The difference between sexes seems to be, at least in part, due to the higher number of men in high academic positions. There does not seem to be a regional difference with regard to h-indices or a difference with regard to departmental status.
Purpose
The number of gender affirmation surgeries performed in the United States is increasing. Frequently, chest contouring is the first surgery for female-to-male transgender patients; it fosters assimilation into the new gender role with a desired sense of masculinity. Creating an aesthetic male chest requires adjustment of breast tissue volume, proper nipple-areolar complex placement, and abolishment of the inframammary fold. Although much has been published on various techniques and outcomes, there is no consensus on how to approach transmale top surgery. We have reviewed the most up-to-date literature and in so doing have uncovered significant knowledge gaps.
Methods
An electronic literature review was performed. PubMed search keywords included combinations of “female-to-male,” “transgender surgery,” “chest contour,” and “nipple-areolar complex.” Articles were included if the patients were transgender female to male.
Results
Our literature search yielded 67 unique articles, 22 of which met our inclusion criteria. A total of 2447 unique patients were analyzed. The articles discussed aspects of chest surgery in female-to-male transsexuals including mastectomy and nipple aesthetics. Relevant data trends were extracted and subsequently investigated.
Discussion
Female-to-male transgender patients often undergo chest contouring as their initial gender affirmation surgery. As the surgical treatment of gender dysphoria continues to grow, it is imperative for plastic surgeons to understand the surgical options and associated outcomes for transmasculine top surgery. Future research is needed to improve patient selection, surgical decision making, and patient-reported outcomes for different chest contouring techniques. In addition, there is a significant knowledge gap for the ideal nipple-areolar complex shape, size, and location.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.