| Literature DB >> 25636495 |
Marrissa Martyn-St James1, Katy Cooper2, Eva Kaltenthaler3, Kath Dickinson4, Anna Cantrell5, Kevan Wylie6, Leila Frodsham7, Catherine Hood8.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Tramadol is a centrally acting analgesic prescribed off-label for the treatment of premature ejaculation (PE). However, tramadol may cause addiction and difficulty in breathing and the beneficial effect of tramadol in PE is yet not supported by a high level of evidence. The purpose of this study was to systematically review the evidence from randomised controlled trials (RCT) for tramadol in the management of PE.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25636495 PMCID: PMC4417346 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2490-15-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Urol ISSN: 1471-2490 Impact factor: 2.264
Figure 1Study selection process - Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA) flow diagram.
RCT characteristics, efficacy and safety outcomes, and risk of bias assessment
| RCT (country) duration | PE definition, Lifelong/acquired PE, erectile dysfuntion | Treatment, comparator, numbers analysed/randomised (%) When taken | Efficacy outcomes and results | Adverse events | Risk of bias assessment |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Alghobary 2010 [ | DSM-IV-TR All lifelong PE ED, NR | - Tramadol 50 mg 2 to 3 h PC, 17/17 (100%) - Paroxetine 20 mg/d, 18/18 (100%) | IELT (Stopwatch): see Figure | The drugs were generally tolerated and no serious side-effects encountered apart from mild headache and gastric upset with paroxetine and mainly gastric upset with tramadol and no withdrawn cases recorded. | Unclear risk - allocation method and blinded outcome assessment not reported |
| Bar-Or 2012 [ | DSM-IV-TR All lifelong PE ED, excluded | - Tramadol 62 mg, 206/232 (89%) - Tramadol 89 mg, 198/217 (91%) - Placebo, 200/228 (88%) 2 to 8 h PC | IELT (Stopwatch): see Figure | Any adverse event: Tramadol 62 mg: 12% Tramadol 89 mg: 16% Placebo: 7% No difference was observed in the incidence of withdrawal by treatment group (0.0% placebo, 1.0% 62 mg tramadol, 1.6% 89 mg tramadol). There were no serious AEs. | Unclear risk - allocation method and blinded outcome assessment not reported |
| Eassa 2013[ | PE def, NR All lifelong PE ED, excluded | - Tramadol 25 mg, 100/100 (100%) - Tramadol 50 mg, 100/100 (100%) - Tramadol 100 mg, 100/100 (100%) 2 to 3 h PC | IELT (Stopwatch): see Figure | Tramadol 25 mg - somnolence (100%); pruritus (100%) Tramadol 50 mg - somnolence (100%); pruritus (100%); dizziness (18%); headache (16%); dry mouth (13%) Tramadol 100 mg - somnolence (100%); pruritus (100%); dizziness (38%); headache (30%); dry mouth (20%); nausea (20%); vomiting (17%) | Unclear risk - allocation method and blinded outcome assessment not reported |
| Gameel 2013 [ | IELT of <2 min in >75% of episodes All had PE for >1 year ED, excluded | - Tramadol 50 mg 2 h PC + inert lubricating gel 15 min PC, 29/30 (97%) - Sildenafil 50 mg 1 h PC + inert lubricating gel 15 min PC, 30/30 (100%) - Paroxetine 20 mg 4 h PC + inert lubricating gel 15 min PC, 28/30 (93%) - Lidocaine gel 15 min PC + oral multivitamin 1-4 h PC, 30/30 (100%) - Placebo (oral multivitamin 1-4 h PC + inert lubricating gel 15 min PC), 27/30 (90%) | IELT (stopwatch): see Figure | Greater sleep disturbance, dry mouth, nausea, dizziness, fatigue, vomiting, sweating, and headache were reported with tramadol, sildenafil and paroxetine. All side effects were reported as being tolerable. | Unclear risk - allocation method and blinded outcome assessment not reported |
| Kahn 2013 [ | DSM-IV TR 41/60 (68%) lifelong PE ED, excluded | - Tramadol 100 mg/d, 4 weeks then 2 or 8 h PC, 4 weeks; 30/30 (100%) - Placebo/d, 4 weeks then 2 or 8 h PC, 4 weeks; 30/30 (100%) | IELT (stopwatch): Week 8 tramadol daily 202.5 s, 2 or 8 h PC, 238.2 s (p < 0.001 vs baseline); placebo daily 94.8 s (p = 0.632 vs baseline) placebo 2 or 8 h PC 96.6 s (p = 0.611 vs baseline). Coital frequency tramadol daily 4.32/week (p = 0.005) tramadol 2 or 8 h PC 4.86/week (p = 0.005). Coital frequency placebo daily 2.88/week (p = 0.875) placebo 2 or 8 h PC 3.23/week (p = 0.752). | The overall AE rate was 9.8% (6.7%, and 12.4% for placebo and 100 mg tramadol respectively) ED occurred in 3.33% of men (n = 1). Vertigo was observed in 3.33% of patients (n = 2); dizziness, headache, drowsiness, and common cold were observed in 6.67% of patients (n = 2 each). There were no serious AEs. | Unclear risk - allocation method and blinded outcome assessment not reported |
| Kaynar 2012 [ | IELT ≤2 min during 90% intercourse episodes All lifelong PE ED, excluded | - Tramadol 25 mg, 30/30 (100%) - Placebo, 30/30 (100%) 2 h PC | IELT (stopwatch): see Figure | Any adverse event: Tramadol: 27% Placebo: 0% Mild nausea/headache: Tramadol: 20% Mild somnolence: Tramadol: (6.5%) | Unclear risk - allocation method and blinded outcome assessment not reported |
| Safarinejad 2006 [ | IELT ≤2 min during 90% coitus All lifelong PE ED, excluded | - Tramadol 50 mg, 29/32 (91%) - Placebo, 28/32 (88%) 2 h PC | IELT (stopwatch): see Figure | Any adverse event: Tramadol: 28% Placebo: 16% (mainly nausea) | Unclear risk - blinded outcome assessment not reported |
| Xiong 2011[ | IELT ≤2 min All lifelong PE ED, NR | - Tramadol 50 mg 2 h PC with behavioural therapy (not reported which) (n = 36) - Behavioural therapy alone (n = 36); | IELT (stopwatch): see Figure | Any adverse event: Tramadol: 28% Placebo: 0% Tramadol: nausea (11.1%), vomiting (2.8%), dry mouth (5.6%), dizziness (8.3%). | Unclear risk - allocation method and blinded outcome assessment not reported (unable to assess fully – body text of article in Chinese) |
/d, daily; DSM, Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders; ED, erectile dysfunction; IELT, intra-vaginal ejaculatory latency time; IIEF, International Index of Erectile Dysfunction; NR, not reported; PC, pre-coitus; PE, premature ejaculation.
Figure 2Risk of bias assessment summary by RCT.
Figure 3Tramadol vs. comparator - forest plot of IELT outcomes.
Figure 4Tramadol vs. comparator - forest plot for adverse events.
Figure 5Tramadol different doses - forest plot of IELT outcomes.