Association of sexual dysfunction with lower urinary tract symptoms of BPH and BPH medical therapies: results from the BPH Registry.

Journal: Urology
Published:
Abstract

Objective: The severity of lower urinary tract symptoms (LUTS) has correlated with erectile dysfunction (ED) and ejaculatory dysfunction (EjD) in large-scale epidemiologic studies. ED and EjD are also side effects of some medical therapies for LUTS suggestive of benign prostatic hyperplasia (LUTS/BPH). These relationships were examined in a physician office-based population of men enrolled in the BPH Registry.

Methods: Enrolled men with LUTS/BPH who completed the International Prostate Symptom Score (IPSS), IPSS bother question, 5-item International Index of Erectile Function, and the 3 ejaculatory function items of the Male Sexual Health Questionnaire-EjD short form at baseline were eligible. The relationship between sexual dysfunction and LUTS/BPH and BPH medical therapies were examined using multivariate analyses.

Results: Of 6924 men enrolled, 5042 (mean age 65 years) completed all 4 baseline assessments. Of 3084 sexually active men, age, total IPSS, IPSS bother score, hypertension, diabetes, and black race/ethnicity were independent predictors of both ED and EjD (all P < .05). For the subset of 1362 men receiving BPH medical therapy, a significant association (P < .0001) was demonstrated for ED and EjD with specific BPH medical therapies. The alpha(1A)-subtype nonsuperselective quinazoline alpha(1)-blockers alfuzosin, doxazosin, and terazosin appeared to be associated with better ejaculatory function than were the alpha(1A)-subtype superselective sulfonamide alpha(1)-blocker tamsulosin, 5alpha-reductase inhibitors, and alpha(1)-blocker plus 5alpha-reductase inhibitor combination therapy.

Conclusions: These results have provided additional evidence of the link between LUTS/BPH and sexual dysfunction in aging men and support clinical trial results indicating different rates of sexual side effects for BPH medical therapies.

Authors
Raymond Rosen, John Wei, Stanley Althof, Allen Seftel, Martin Miner, Michael Perelman
Relevant Conditions

Enlarged Prostate (BPH)