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Increased Cross-Gender Identification Independent of Gender Role Behavior in Girls with Congenital Adrenal Hyperplasia: Results from a Standardized Assessment of 4- to 11-Year-Old Children.
[congenital adrenal hyperplasia]
While
reports
showing
a
link
between
prenatal
androgen
exposure
and
human
gender
role
behavior
are
consistent
and
the
effects
are
robust
,
associations
to
gender
identity
or
cross-gender
identification
are
less
clear
.
The
aim
of
the
current
study
was
to
investigate
potential
cross-gender
identification
in
girls
exposed
prenatally
to
high
concentrations
of
androgens
due
to
classical
congenital
adrenal
hyperplasia
(
CAH
)
.
Assessment
included
two
standardized
measures
and
a
short
parent
interview
assessing
frequency
of
behavioral
features
of
cross-gender
identification
as
conceptualized
in
Part
A
of
the
diagnostic
criteria
for
gender
identity
disorder
(
GID
)
in
the
DSM
-IV-TR
.
Next
,
because
existing
measures
may
have
conflated
gender
role
behavior
with
gender
identity
and
because
the
distinction
is
potentially
informative
,
we
factor
analyzed
items
from
the
measures
which
included
both
gender
identity
and
gender
role
items
to
establish
the
independence
of
the
two
constructs
.
Participants
were
43
girls
and
38
boys
with
CAH
and
41
unaffected
female
and
31
unaffected
male
relatives
,
aged
4
-
to
11
-
years
.
Girls
with
CAH
had
more
cross-gender
responses
than
female
controls
on
all
three
measures
of
cross-gender
identification
as
well
as
on
a
composite
measure
of
gender
identity
independent
of
gender
role
behavior
.
Furthermore
,
parent
report
indicated
that
5
/
39
(
12
.
8
Â
%
)
of
the
girls
with
CAH
exhibited
cross-gender
behavior
in
all
five
behavioral
domains
which
comprise
the
cross-gender
identification
component
of
GID
compared
to
0
/
105
(
0
.
0
Â
%
)
of
the
children
in
the
other
three
groups
combined
.
These
data
suggest
that
girls
exposed
to
high
concentrations
of
androgens
prenatally
are
more
likely
to
show
cross-gender
identification
than
girls
without
CAH
or
boys
with
and
without
CAH
.
Our
findings
suggest
that
prenatal
androgen
exposure
could
play
a
role
in
gender
identity
development
in
healthy
children
,
and
may
be
relevant
to
gender
assignment
in
cases
of
prenatal
hormone
disruption
,
including
,
in
particular
,
cases
of
severely
virilized
46
,
XX
CAH
.
Diseases
Validation
Diseases presenting
"human gender role behavior are consistent and the effects are robust"
symptom
congenital adrenal hyperplasia
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