M G Kirby1, G Schnetzler, K H Zou, T Symonds. 1. Faculty of Health and Human Sciences, Centre for Research in Primary and Community Care, University of Hertfordshire, Hatfield, UK. kirbym@globalnet.co.uk
Abstract
AIM: To determine the rate of newly detected underlying disease in men receiving their first (index) phosphodiesterase type 5 inhibitor (PDE5i) prescription. METHODS: This non-interventional, retrospective study used anonymised patient records from UK general practices identified from the THIN database. Records of men aged ≥ 18 years, who received an index PDE5i prescription between January 1999 and June 2008 and with a continuous medical history (≥ 60 months) before the index prescription were included. Primary end-points were the prevalence of underlying disease prior to the index prescription and to establish the detection rate, defined as cumulative incidence of such a diagnosis in the 3 months following the index prescription. Assessments included comparison with age-matched controls, comparison with identical time periods immediately before and 1 year after, index prescription, and changes over time during the study period. Descriptive statistics, analysis of proportions and multivariate logistic regression analysis were used. RESULTS: Among the 24,708 patients receiving a PDE5i, the prevalence of any underlying diagnosis before the index prescription was 70.23%; prevalence of vasculogenic disease was highest (48.20%). The detection rate of any underlying disease was 11.53%, and again highest for vasculogenic disease (4.07%). Compared with an age-matched control population, the additional detection rate of an unknown underlying disease at PDE5i prescription was 45 for hypertension, 61 for hypercholesterolaemia, 38 for diabetes and 5 for hypogonadism per 10,000 men. CONCLUSION: Only a minority of men with erectile dysfunction have a previously undiagnosed important underlying disease that is uncovered at the time of an initial PDE5i prescription by a GP.
AIM: To determine the rate of newly detected underlying disease in men receiving their first (index) phosphodiesterase type 5 inhibitor (PDE5i) prescription. METHODS: This non-interventional, retrospective study used anonymised patient records from UK general practices identified from the THIN database. Records of men aged ≥ 18 years, who received an index PDE5i prescription between January 1999 and June 2008 and with a continuous medical history (≥ 60 months) before the index prescription were included. Primary end-points were the prevalence of underlying disease prior to the index prescription and to establish the detection rate, defined as cumulative incidence of such a diagnosis in the 3 months following the index prescription. Assessments included comparison with age-matched controls, comparison with identical time periods immediately before and 1 year after, index prescription, and changes over time during the study period. Descriptive statistics, analysis of proportions and multivariate logistic regression analysis were used. RESULTS: Among the 24,708 patients receiving a PDE5i, the prevalence of any underlying diagnosis before the index prescription was 70.23%; prevalence of vasculogenic disease was highest (48.20%). The detection rate of any underlying disease was 11.53%, and again highest for vasculogenic disease (4.07%). Compared with an age-matched control population, the additional detection rate of an unknown underlying disease at PDE5i prescription was 45 for hypertension, 61 for hypercholesterolaemia, 38 for diabetes and 5 for hypogonadism per 10,000 men. CONCLUSION: Only a minority of men with erectile dysfunction have a previously undiagnosed important underlying disease that is uncovered at the time of an initial PDE5i prescription by a GP.
Authors: Robert V Same; Mahmoud Al Rifai; David I Feldman; Kevin L Billups; Clinton A Brawner; Zeina A Dardari; Jonathan K Ehrman; Steven J Keteyian; Mouaz H Al-Mallah; Michael J Blaha Journal: Clin Cardiol Date: 2017-08-14 Impact factor: 2.882
Authors: Andrea M Isidori; Giovanni Corona; Antonio Aversa; Daniele Gianfrilli; Emmanuele A Jannini; Carlo Foresta; Mario Maggi; Andrea Lenzi Journal: Int J Endocrinol Date: 2014-05-15 Impact factor: 3.257