Disorders of sex development (DSDs)

(also known as differences of sex development or intersex conditions)

  • In 98–99 percent of all births, the baby’s genitals and internal reproductive organs have developed entirely normally. The baby’s sex is easy to tell from the external genitals: if there’s a penis it’s a boy; if there’s a vulva it’s a girl.
  • In most other births, the baby’s sex is obvious from the genitals even though the reproductive system has not developed entirely normally; but in around 0.02 percent of births (two in 10,000), further investigation is needed to determine the infant’s sex.
  • In that 0.02 percent of births, the baby is said to have a “DSD”, a disorder or difference of sex development. There are around 40 DSDs, some of them extremely rare.
  • DSDs are sex-specific: each affects only people of one sex or the other. People with DSDs do not belong to a third sex, or both sexes.
  • Diagnosis and treatment of DSDs is a highly specialised area of medicine. Many DSDs cause infertility, and some have other serious health impacts throughout a person’s life. 

Examples of DSDs