| Literature DB >> 35952615 |
David L Rowland1, Sean M McNabney2, Krisztina Hevesi3.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: The role of bother/distress in the diagnosis of premature ejaculation (PE) has received minimal investigation compared with the 2 other diagnostic criteria, ejaculatory control and ejaculatory latency (EL). AIM: This study assessed (i) the added variance explained by bother/distress to the diagnostic accuracy of PE and (ii) determined its overall contribution to a PE diagnosis.Entities:
Keywords: Bother/Distress; Diagnosis; Ejaculation Latency; Ejaculatory Control; Premature Ejaculation
Year: 2022 PMID: 35952615 PMCID: PMC9537260 DOI: 10.1016/j.esxm.2022.100548
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sex Med ISSN: 2050-1161 Impact factor: 2.523
Description of the sample (n = 2,589)
| Variable | Mean (std. dev.) |
|---|---|
| Age (years) | 38.2 (13.5) |
| Level of education | 2.87 (1.57) |
| Anxiety/depression (% yes) | 23.2 % |
| Medical issues (% yes) | 22.0 % |
| Erectile function (range 4–20, 4–9 severe ED) | 17.16 (3.49) |
| Frequency of partnered sex (range 1–10) | 5.96 (1.78) |
| Frequency of masturbation (range 1–11) | 5.62 (2.15) |
| Sexual interest (range 2–10, 10 = high) | 8.11 (1.60) |
| Sexual relationship satisfaction (range 1–5, 5 = high) | 2.91 (1.85) |
| Overall relationship satisfaction (range 1–5, 5 = high)) | 2.62 (1.72) |
Distribution of bother/distress across no, probable, and definite PE groups (n = 2,378)*,†
| Bother/distress | No PE | Probable PE | Definite PE |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 328 (17.8%) | 27 (6.6%) | 6 (4.8%) |
| 2 | 334 (18.1%) | 48 (11.7%) | 4 (3.2%) |
| 3 | 485 (26.3%) | 128 (31.3%) | 18 (14.4%) |
| 4 | 404 (21.9%) | 95 (23.2%) | 34 (27.2%) |
| 5 | 293 (15.9%) | 111 (27.1%) | 63 (50.4%) |
χ2[8] = 156.37, P < .001.
Overall summary: No PE (n = 1,844, 77.5%), Probable PE (n = 409, 17.2%), Definite PE (n = 125, 5.3%).
Block entry regression first of EL and then of bother/distress on ejaculatory control (n = 2,503)
| Block | Predictor covariate(s) | Δ | Overall |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Ejaculation latency | 0.271 | 0.271 |
| 2 | Bother/distress | 0.031 | 0.302 |
| 3 | Age | 0.001 | 0.303 |
| 3 | Medical issues | ||
| 3 | Anxiety/depression | ||
| 3 | Erectile function | ||
| 3 | Interest/importance of sex |
Indicates P ≤ .001 for overall R2 or the ΔR2.
Block entry regression first of bother/distress and then of EL on ejaculatory control (n = 2,503)
| Block | Predictor covariate(s) | Δ | Overall |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Bother/distress | 0.059 | 0.059 |
| 2 | Ejaculation latency | 0.244 | 0.302 |
| 3 | Age | 0.001 | 0.303 |
| 3 | Medical issues | ||
| 3 | Anxiety/depression | ||
| 3 | Erectile function | ||
| 3 | Interest/importance of sex |
Indicates P ≤ .001 for R2 or the ΔR2.
Accuracy of group predictions using EL and bother/distress, with groupings based on PEDT-determined levels of ejaculatory control
| Outcomes | Outcome groups | % Cases correctly classified and related | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Single predictor | Both predictors | |||
| 3 ( | No vs probable vs definite PE | EL | 71.6% (<.001) | 72.3% (<.001) |
| Bother/distress | 69.8% (<.001) | |||
| 2 ( | No PE vs probable/definite PE | EL | 76.0% (<.001) | 76.1% (<.001) |
| Bother/distress | 69.8% (<.001) | |||
| 2 ( | No PE vs definite PE | EL | 90.7% (<.001) | 91.7% (<.001) |
| Bother/distress | 88.8% (<.001) | |||
Commonality analysis to determine contribution of bother/distress to ejaculatory outcomes (n = 2,378)
| Sources of variation in ejaculatory control | Commonality coefficient | Model contribution (%) |
|---|---|---|
| Ejaculatory latency (EL) | 0.230 | 79.80% |
| Bother/distress | 0.031 | 10.74% |
| Common/shared variance | 0.027 | 9.47% |
| Multiple |