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BackTrial on puberty blockers for gender-questioning children is essential, says Dr Hilary Cass
Trial on puberty blockers for gender-questioning children is essential, says Dr Hilary Cass
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BBC UK News6/22/2026Health3 min readUnited Kingdom

Trial on puberty blockers for gender-questioning children is essential, says Dr Hilary Cass

Quick Look

  • A landmark review author, Dr Hilary Cass, believes a trial on puberty blockers for gender-questioning children is essential to reduce harm, despite campaigners' concerns.
  • The trial, set to recruit children as young as 11, includes enhanced safeguards and will examine the drugs' impact on physical, social, and emotional well-being.

AI-generated summary

Why It Matters

A trial examining the risks or benefits of drugs that can delay puberty for gender-questioning children is set to proceed, despite ethical concerns from campaigners. The trial follows a review by Dr Hilary Cass which highlighted weak evidence for the use of puberty blockers.

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A trial examining the risks or benefits of drugs that can delay puberty for gender-questioning children will help reduce harm, according to the author of a landmark review.

Dr Hilary Cass said she was "absolutely convinced that more children will be harmed if we don't do the trial than if we do."

Her comments follow pressure from campaigners and some politicians to have the research programme scrapped after it was announced children as young as 11 could be recruited onto the trial.

The Pathways clinical trial will be run by researchers at Kings College, London (KCL). In addition to setting a minimum age, they have also increased the safeguards for participants.

The puberty blockers research was recommended by Dr Cass after her 2024 review of gender medicine for children pointed to weak evidence behind their use.

The NHS has in the past prescribed puberty blockers for under-18s gender care, but in 2024 the government brought in a UK-wide, indefinite ban on the drugs being prescribed privately or by the NHS.

Speaking to the BBC, Dr Cass said she believes since then "some of the hype about risks have been exaggerated in that we genuinely don't know if there are harms."

And she said the trial was "essential" to answer the question about "whether these drugs are helpful or not".

She added that young people will be "closely monitored in every respect" and the drugs stopped if concerns emerge.

The researchers will examine the impact of the drugs on the physical, social and emotional wellbeing of participants. This will include checks on bone density, brain function and fertility.

"Today we have young people turning up in the clinics on testosterone at 11, which we know is irreversible," she said.

"It may be that if they were prescribed puberty blockers instead, that would give more time for the therapist to work with them and perhaps come to a different solution than a long-term life on medication."

Testosterone is a masculinising hormone which should not be prescribed in the UK for children under 16 for gender treatment.

Mr Murray said: "I have felt uncomfortable and uneasy about some of the challenges raised by this matter.

"But for me, following the clinical advice, basing future decisions on clinical evidence, is the right way to move forward in the context of me having received the most robust assurances about the safeguards which are in place to protect young people involved in this trial from receiving harm."

The trial was announced in November but paused in February when medical regulators proposed a minimum age of 14 for participation.

KCL researchers said after careful discussion, age limits were agreed at 11 for birth-registered female participants, and 12 for birth-registered males. They are due to start recruiting children in August, subject to ongoing legal action.

That action is being brought by campaigners who claim the trial is unethical and that children cannot give properly informed consent to take part in something that could, for instance, damage their future fertility.

One of those taking legal action is Bayswater Support Group, which works with parents who are wary of medical solutions for their gender-questioning children.

A spokesperson for the organisation says the trial risks causing irreversible harm to the participants and will not resolve the "outstanding questions about puberty blockers".

Open Questions

  • Can children give informed consent for this trial?
  • Will the trial resolve outstanding questions about puberty blockers?
  • What are the long-term effects of these drugs?

Related Topics

This article was originally published by BBC UK News.

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