Clinical Trial: Polyethylene-glycol Assisted Nerve Repair in Phalloplasty

Study Status: RECRUITING
Recruit Status: RECRUITING
Study Type: INTERVENTIONAL




Official Title: Nerve Repair Using Hydrophilic Polymers to Improve Tactile and Erogenous Neophallus Sensation

Brief Summary: Phalloplasty, a genitourinary surgery for transmasculine patients, reconstructs a neophallus using tissue transferred from other parts of the body to the groin.
However, this technique fails to provide adequate sensation, causing regret and persistent dysphoria.
Peripheral nerve regeneration is the greatest barrier to sensory recovery, given the slow rate of regrowth coupled with the negative effects of axonal degeneration.
Topical application of polyethylene glycol (PEG) fuses severed axonal membranes, restoring the nerve's immediate ability to conduct electrical signals across the repair site.
We hypothesize that utilizing PEG in phalloplasties will significantly improve neophallus sensation and postoperative quality of life.