| Literature DB >> 32938488 |
Pierre Röscher1, Jacqueline M van Wyk2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Interventions to treat early prostate cancer (PCa) can leave men with debilitating sexual side effects. The cluster of side effects referred to as the neglected sexual side effects (NSSE) may remain permanent, undiagnosed and untreated because men are hesitant to disclose them. Questionnaires offer a discreet way into the discussion, subsequent diagnosis and possible treatment of the NSSE. This study will be conducted to map the evidence about the prevalence of the neglected sexual side effects (NSSE) after PCa treatment, and use of questionnaires in its diagnosis and screening.Entities:
Keywords: Altered perception of orgasm; Orgasm associated pain; Orgasm-associated incontinence; Penile deformity; Penile shortening; Prevalence; Prostate cancer; Questionnaire use; Screening tool; Urinary incontinence during sexual stimulation
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32938488 PMCID: PMC7495715 DOI: 10.1186/s13643-020-01473-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Syst Rev ISSN: 2046-4053
The PCC framework
| Criteria | Determinants | |
|---|---|---|
| P | Population | Men who received surgical and non-surgical treatment following early PCa diagnosis |
| • Surgical treatment (radical prostatectomy surgery) | ||
| • Non-surgical treatment (radiation therapy) | ||
| C | Concept | Neglected sexual side effects (NSSE) |
| • Anejaculation | ||
| • Orgasmic pain | ||
| • Orgasmic dysfunction | ||
| • Climacturia | ||
| • Urinary incontinence from sexual stimulation | ||
| • Peyronies disease | ||
| • Penile length shortening | ||
| C | Context | Prevalence of NSSE |
| Questionnaires used to screen for the prevalence NSSE |
Pilot database search results
| Keyword search | Date of search | Search engine used | No. of publications retrieved |
|---|---|---|---|
| (Orgas* OR Penil* OR Climacturia (MeSH Terms) OR Dysorgasmia (MeSH Terms) OR anejaculation (MeSH Terms) OR Peyronie OR neglected AND [prostate cancer (MeSH Terms) OR Prostatectomy (MeSH Terms)] | 1 September 2019 | Pubmed | 152 |
Inclusion and exclusion criteria of the study
| The inclusion criteria | The exclusion criteria |
|---|---|
| Only primary studies that present evidence on the following: | • Review articles |
| • The prevalence of NSSE after early stage PCa treatment | • Non-peer reviewed articles (e.g. books, magazines, policy briefs) |
| • The use of questionnaires to screen for the prevalence of NSSE after early stage PCa treatment | • Commentaries, editorials, programme evaluations and letters |
| • Publications on sexual dysfunction not relating to the prevalence and the use of questionnaires to screen for NSSE after early PCa treatment | |
| • Original studies available in English and published between 1 January 2009‑31 December 2019 | |
| • Studies outside the period of interest and studies not available in English |
Data charting form
Author, date and reference Aims and research questions Geographical setting Study population Study design Number of participants Period post-PCa investigated Prevalence of NSSE Reported use of questionnaire to screen for NSSE after PCa Quality of the study |