@StevenSaus theres a lot of possible interactions that could be considered.
like the three sets were
men 25%,
women 35%,
nonbinary people 38%,
but that 38% breaks down to 30% transmasc(afab) and 8% transfem(amab).
So if we're looking at transfem and transmasc wider grouping including women and men, its 43% transfeminine, 55% transmasculine and 2% crossdressers which im assuming are amab, making up the total. So 45% amab, 55% afab.
from under 18 gender clinic data in the UK the pattern seems to be that transmasc people are more likely to come out younger than transfem, though that starts to balance out by the time you hit 18, iirc 16 is the turning point where more transfem patients are being referred. Those figures seem to correlate to an idea that earlier afab puberty and societal focus on their bodies causing more distress leading to awareness.