| Literature DB >> 28459142 |
Paolo Capogrosso1,2, Eugenio Ventimiglia1,3, Walter Cazzaniga1,3, Francesco Montorsi1,3, Andrea Salonia1,3.
Abstract
In addition to urinary incontinence and erectile dysfunction, several other impairments of sexual function potentially occurring after radical prostatectomy (RP) have been described; as a whole, these less frequently assessed disorders are referred to as neglected side effects. In particular, orgasmic dysfunctions (ODs) have been reported in a non-negligible number of cases, with detrimental impacts on patients' overall sexual life. This review aimed to comprehensively discuss the prevalence and physiopathology of post-RP ODs, as well as potential treatment options. Orgasm-associated incontinence (climacturia) has been reported to occur in between 20% and 93% of patients after RP. Similarly, up to 19% of patients complain of postoperative orgasm-associated pain, mainly referred pain at the level of the penis. Moreover, impairment in the sensation of orgasm or even complete anorgasmia has been reported in 33% to 77% of patients after surgery. Clinical and surgical factors including age, the use of a nerve-sparing technique, and robotic surgery have been variably associated with the risk of ODs after RP, although robust and reliable data allowing for a proper estimation of the risk of postoperative orgasmic function impairment are still lacking. Likewise, little evidence regarding the management of postoperative ODs is currently available. In general, physicians should be aware of the prevalence of ODs after RP, in order to properly counsel all patients both preoperatively and immediately post-RP about the potential occurrence of bothersome and distressful changes in their overall sexual function.Entities:
Keywords: Orgasm; Prostatectomy; Prostatic neoplasm; Urinary incontinence
Year: 2017 PMID: 28459142 PMCID: PMC5419114 DOI: 10.5534/wjmh.2017.35.1.1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: World J Mens Health ISSN: 2287-4208 Impact factor: 5.400
Fig. 1(A) Physiology of orgasm and ejaculation. (B) Orgasmic alterations after radical prostatectomy. MPOA: medial preoptic area, PVN: paraventricular thalamic nucleus, nPGI: paragigantocellularis nucleus.
Studies reporting the prevalence of climacturia after radical prostatectomy
| Study (author) | Case | Study design | Patient characteristic | Tool for the assessment of OF | Rate of climacturia | Predictor of climacturia |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Koeman et al [ | 14 ORP | Prospective study | Median age, 65 yr | Non-validated self-administered questionnaire | 64% | - |
| Barnas et al [ | 239 ORP | Prospective study | Mean age, 62 yr | Non-validated self-administered questionnaire | 16% with every orgasm | - |
| Lee et al [ | 42 ORP | Prospective study | Mean age, 58.9 yr | Non-validated self-administered questionnaire | 9.5% rarely | None of the tested covariates was significantly associated (age, time since RP, Gleason score, UI, EF, peak urine flow) |
| Choi et al [ | 475 ORP+LRP+CP | Retrospective analysis | Mean age, 60 yr | Medical interview (climacturia defined as at least 3 episodes of incontinence) | 20% after RP | RP+LRP |
| Nilsson et al [ | 691 ORP/RARP | Prospective analysis | Median age, 63 yr | Non-validated questionnaire | 28% at <half of orgasms | UIa |
| Messaoudi et al [ | 50 LRP | Prospective study | Mean age, 63.9 yr | Non-validated self-administered questionnaire | 25.4% | - |
| O’Neil et al [ | 279 ORP/RARP | Retrospective analysis | Mean age, 62.2 yr | Non-validated self-administered questionnaire | 28.3% (after RP) | Surgery |
| Frey et al [ | 256 RP | Retrospective analysis | Median age, 64 yr | Non-validated self-administered questionnaire | Non-validated self-administered questionnaire | UI |
| Capogrosso et al [ | 395 ORP | Prospective comparison | Mean age, 61.5 yr | Non-validated self-administered questionnaire | 3 mo of FU | RARP patients showed significantly faster recovery |
OF: orgasmic function, ORP: open radical prostatectomy, LRP: laparoscopic radical prostatectomy, CP: cystoprostatectomy, RARP: robot-assisted radical prostatectomy, PRP: perineal radical prostatectomy, RT: radiotherapy, RP: radical prostatectomy, FU: follow-up, UI: urinary incontinence, ED: erectile dysfunction.
aUnivariate analysis.
Studies reporting the prevalence of painful orgasm after radical prostatectomy
| Study (author) | Case | Study design | Patient characteristic | Tool for the assessment of OF | Rate of painful orgasm | Predictor of painful orgasm |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Koeman et al [ | 14 ORP | Prospective study | Median age, 65 yr | Non-validated self-administered questionnaire | 14% | - |
| Barnas et al [ | 239 ORP | Prospective study | Mean age, 62 yr | Non-validated self-administered questionnaire | Overall 14% | - |
| Nilsson et al [ | 691 ORP/RARP | Prospective study | Median age, 63 yr | Non-validated questionnaire | 17.9% | - |
| Matsushita et al [ | 702 RP | Prospective study | Mean age, 64 yr | Non-validated questionnaire | Overall 12% | Nerve-sparing status was not associated |
| Mogorovich et al [ | 613 ORP | Retrospective analysis | Median age, 65 yr | Non-validated self-administered questionnaire | 18% | Seminal vesicle-sparing technique |
| Tewari et al [ | 408 RARP | Prospective study | Median age, 60 yr | Non-validated self-administered questionnaire | 3.20% | - |
| Frey et al [ | 256 RP | Retrospective analysis | Median age, 64 yr | Non-validated self-administered questionnaire | Overall 9% | - |
| Capogrosso et al [ | 395 ORP | Prospective comparison | Mean age, 61.5 yr | Non-validated self-administered questionnaire | 3 mo of FU | RARP patients showed lower rates of PO |
OF: orgasmic function, ORP: open radical prostatectomy, RARP: robot-assisted radical prostatectomy, RP: radical prostatectomy, FU: follow-up, PO: painful orgasm.
Studies reporting the prevalence of altered orgasmic sensation after radical prostatectomy
| Study (author) | Case | Study design | Patient characteristic | Tool for the assessment of OF | Rate of altered orgasmic sensation | Predictor of altered orgasmic sensation |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Koeman et al [ | 14 ORP | Prospective study | Median age, 65 yr | Non-validated self-administered questionnaire | 50% weakened orgasm | - |
| Helgason et al [ | 342 PCa patients (22 RP) | Prospective study | Median age, 72 yr | Non-validated self-administered questionnaire | 14/20 (70.0%) decreased orgasmic pleasure | - |
| Hollenbeck et al [ | 671 ORP | Retrospective analysis | FU of 4~52 mo | Expanded Prostate Cancer Index Composite questionnaire | Anorgasmia in patients aged <58 yr | Age |
| Barnas et al [ | 239 ORP | Prospective study | Mean age, 62 yr | Non-validated self-administered questionnaire | 37% anorgasmia | - |
| Dubbelman et al [ | 458 ORP | Prospective study | Mean age, 63 yr | Non-validated self-administered questionnaire | 33.2% impaired orgasmic function | Age |
| Salonia et al [ | 334 ORP | Retrospective analysis | Mean age, 61.8 yr | International Index of Erectile Function questionnaire | International Index of Erectile Function: OF score linearly increased through follow-up | Age |
| Tewari et al [ | 408 RARP | Prospective study | Median age, 60 yr | Non-validated self-administered questionnaire | Rates of anorgasmia: | Age |
| Messaoudi et al [ | 50 LRP | Prospective study | Mean age, 63.9 yr | Non-validated self-administered questionnaire | 77.8% decreased orgasmic pleasure | - |
| Frey et al [ | 256 RP | Retrospective analysis | Median age, 64 yr | Non-validated self-administered questionnaire | 60% decreased orgasm intensity | UI |
OF: orgasmic function, ORP: open radical prostatectomy, PCa: prostate cancer, RP: radical prostatectomy, RARP: robot-assisted radical prostatectomy, LRP: laparoscopic radical prostatectomy, PRP: perineal radical prostatectomy, FU: follow-up, BNS: bilateral nerve-sparing, UNS: unilateral nerve-sparing, NNS: non-nerve-sparing, UI: urinary incontinence.