| Literature DB >> 33603242 |
Rajalaxmi Velurajah1, Oliver Brunckhorst2, Muhammad Waqar3, Isabel McMullen4, Kamran Ahmed5,6.
Abstract
Men with anxiety disorders have been identified as high risk of developing erectile dysfunction (ED). The aim of this review is to define the prevalence and severity of ED in the male anxiety disorder population. A literature search of three electronic databases (PubMed, Embase and PsychINFO) and a grey literature registry was conducted. Inclusion criteria were studies that investigated adult males, documented diagnosis of anxiety disorders made by a qualified psychiatrist and use of a validated tool to diagnose ED such as International Index of Erectile Function or ICD-10/DSM-IV. The search yielded 1220 articles and 12 studies were selected. The anxiety disorders investigated were post-traumatic stress disorder, obsessive-compulsive disorder, social phobia/social anxiety disorder and panic disorder. We found that the median [IQR] prevalence of ED was 20.0 [5.1-41.2]% and the median [IQR] International Index of Erectile Function-5 scores were 17.62 [13.88-20.88], indicating a mild to moderate severity. Our review suggests a high prevalence of ED in the anxiety disorder population and ED may be more severe in this cohort, therefore advocating this is an important clinical topic. However, the evidence is limited due to the high heterogeneity between the studies and more research is required in this field.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33603242 PMCID: PMC8964411 DOI: 10.1038/s41443-020-00405-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Impot Res ISSN: 0955-9930 Impact factor: 2.408
Fig. 1PRIMSA flowchart showing study selection.
Flowchart showing the number of studies selected and excluded in each stage of the study selection process.
Characteristics of eligible studies including prevalence of ED in men with anxiety disorder.
| Study | Anxiety disorder studied | Country | Study aims | Study design | Total male participants | Total male participates with anxiety disorders | No. of ED and AD participants | Prevalence | Anxiety disorder criteria (codes) | ED criteria | Limitation |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Arbanas [ | PTSD | Croatia | Comparing sexual functioning in patients with different intensity levels of PTSD and patients who receive treatment for PTSD | Cross-sectional | DSM-IV (309.81), CAPS | IIEF-5 | All PTSD patients had combat PTSD; veteran population; PTSD sample may have secondary gain; exclusion of patients without partners. | ||||
| Breyer et al. [ | PTSD | USA | To find the prevalence and correlates of sexual dysfunction in a male veteran population | Retrospective cohort | 3% | ICD-9 (F43.10), DSM-IV (309.81) | ICD-9 | All retrospective data; veteran population; confounder of psychiatric medication use. | |||
| Breyer et al. [ | PTSD | USA | Looking at the association between sexual functioning and PTSD in combat veterans | Retrospective cohort | 10.50% | ICD-9 (F43.10), DSM-IV (309.81) | ICD-9 | All retrospective data; veteran population; all PTSD patients had combat PTSD. | |||
| Cosgrove et al. [ | PTSD | USA | To evaluate the prevalence, correlates and severity of sexual dysfunction in a male veteran population | Case–control | 85% | DSM-IV (309.81) | IIEF-5 | Veteran population; confounder of psychiatric medication use. | |||
| Evren et al. [ | PTSD | Turkey | To find the prevalence of PTSD in male alcohol-dependent patients and see if sociodemographic characteristics have an effect on the prevalence | Case–control | 77.30% | DSM-IV (309.81) | IIEF-5 | All men had alcohol dependence; only had participants in relationships. | |||
| Letica-Crepulja et al. [ | PTSD | Croatia | To assess the predictive models of sexual dysfunctions in male veterans with PTSD | Cross-sectional | 46.20% | DSM-IV (309.81) | IIEF-5 | Veteran population; missing data. | |||
| Fontenelle et al. [ | OCD + SAD | Brazil | Compared sexual functioning in patients with OCD and SAD | Cross-sectional | DSM-IV (OCD = 300.3, SAD = 300.23) | IIEF-5 | No controls; small sample size. | ||||
| Ghassemzadeh et al. [ | OCD | Iran | To evaluate sexual functioning in patients with OCD | Cross-sectional | 20% | MOCI, OCI-R, DSM-IV (300.3) | IIEF-5 | Small sample size | |||
| Blumentals et al. [ | PD | USA | To assess the relationship between panic disorder and ED | Retrospective case–control | 36.20% | Found on IHCIS | ICD-9 | All retrospective data; selection bias due to time restrictions on patient selection | |||
| Figueria et al. [ | PD + SAD | Brazil | To evaluate sexual functioning in patients with social phobia and panic disorder | Retrospective cohort | 7.10% 0% | DSM-IV (PD = 300.01, SAD = 300.23) | DSM-IV | All retrospective data; small sample size | |||
| Okulate et al. [ | PD | Nigeria | To find the prevalence of ED in men who were also screened for depression, alcohol abuse and panic disorder | Cross-sectional | 20% | PHQ, DSM-IV (300.01) | IIEF-5 | All participants were military personnel; small sample size | |||
| Wang et al. [ | PD | Taiwan | To explore the incidence rate of ED among panic disorder patients | Retrospective cohort | ICD-9CM (300.01, 300.21) | ICD-9 | All retrospective data |
CAPS Clinician-Administered PTSD Scale, DSM-IV Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders 4th Edition, ICD-9 International Classification of Diseases 9th Revision, IHCIS Integrated Healthcare Information Services National Managed Care Benchmark Database, IIEF-5 International Inventory of Erectile Function-5, MOCI Maudsley Obsessional-Compulsive Inventory, OCD obsessive–compulsive disorder, OCI-R Obsessive–Compulsive Inventory—Revised, PD panic disorder, PHQ Patient Health Questionnaire, PTSD post-traumatic stress disorder, SAD social anxiety disorder/social phobia.
aNo. of ED with AD diagnosis was not reported, but we worked this out from prevalence and no. of AD.
bPrevalence calculation was not done using the whole AD male population (n = 300).
Severity of ED in men with anxiety disorders.
| Study | AD studied | Mean IIEF-5 scores (SD) of anxiety disorder groups | Diagnostic category of ED for anxiety disorder groups |
|---|---|---|---|
| Arbanas [ | PTSD—treated | 11.08 (9.19) | Moderate |
| PTSD—untreated | 11.76 (9.58) | Moderate | |
| Evren et al. [ | PTSD | 18.30 (8.30) | Mild to moderate |
| Letica-Crepulja et al. [ | PTSD | 16.00 (9.71) | Moderate |
| Fontenelle et al. [ | SAD | 23.45 (8.26) | Mild |
| OCD | 17.62 (10.03) | Mild to moderate | |
| Ghassemzadeh et al. [ | OCD | 25.80 (4.30) | Mild |
Fig. 2Risk of bias assessments summary for all studies.
Traffic light plot showing risk of bias in each domain and the overall risk for all studies.