Skip to main content
European Psychiatry logoLink to European Psychiatry
. 2021 Aug 13;64(Suppl 1):S817. doi: 10.1192/j.eurpsy.2021.2159

Gender incongruence: A longitudinal perspective from childhood throughout adolescence

L Borges 1,*, G Riggi 2
PMCID: PMC9480315

Abstract

Introduction

Gender identity is each person’s internal and individual experience of gender. Gender expression is how a person publicly expresses their gender. Gender incongruence (GI) is defined as a condition in which a person has a marked incongruence between the expressed or experienced gender and the biological sex at birth. Adolescence is a crucial period for the persistence or development of GI, due hormonal changes, peer relations and first romantic experiences.

Objectives

To make a revision of the literature about GI along childhood throughout adolescence.

Methods

Research in the literature with the words “gender identity”, “gender incongruence”, “gender dysphoria”, “childhood” and “adolescence” in scientific databases.

Results

GI is present in a small percentage of children, often provoking psychopathological distress. There is a high prevalence of autism spectrum disorders in these children, compared with the general population. In most cases the dysphoria does not persist until adolescence. There has been an increasing number of adolescents seeking for treatment at gender identity services. The studies show that after the onset of puberty, the probability of persistent GI is high and that adolescents submitted to hormonal suppression tend to continue the medical treatment.

Conclusions

Epidemiological formal studies about gender incongruence in children and adolescents are very few. Studies of prevalence in these populations are community studies and don’t reflect the true prevalence of GI, so it would be necessary to investigate its prevalence and persistence in different world populations. It’s also necessary to make more prospective studies about the long-term effects of the medical treatment of GI.

Disclosure

No significant relationships.

Keywords: childhood, adolescence, gender incongruence, gender dysphoria


Articles from European Psychiatry are provided here courtesy of Cambridge University Press

RESOURCES