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Current practice in the management of ischemic priapism: An anonymous survey of ISSM members

Penile shunting is the standard of care in management of ischemic priapism refractory (IPR) to non-surgical interventions. Due to high rates of impotence, corporal fibrosis, and loss of penile length, recent literature suggests these patients benefit from immediate penile prosthesis (PP) placement....

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Autores principales: Butaney, Mohit, Thirumavalavan, Nannan, Rodriguez, Dayron, Gross, Martin S., Munarriz, Ricardo
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6679808/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30718828
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41443-019-0120-4
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author Butaney, Mohit
Thirumavalavan, Nannan
Rodriguez, Dayron
Gross, Martin S.
Munarriz, Ricardo
author_facet Butaney, Mohit
Thirumavalavan, Nannan
Rodriguez, Dayron
Gross, Martin S.
Munarriz, Ricardo
author_sort Butaney, Mohit
collection PubMed
description Penile shunting is the standard of care in management of ischemic priapism refractory (IPR) to non-surgical interventions. Due to high rates of impotence, corporal fibrosis, and loss of penile length, recent literature suggests these patients benefit from immediate penile prosthesis (PP) placement. An IRB-exempt anonymous electronic survey of the 2,168 members of the International Society for Sexual Medicine (ISSM) was conducted. The survey included demographic information, confidence and experience related management of IPR. The aim was to evaluate current practice patterns in management of IPR and to investigate the role of immediate PP implantation in the management of prolonged (>36-hours) IPR. The survey response rate was 11.6% (n=251). Most respondents were urologists (173), from the USA (49.1%), and had completed a fellowship in male sexual medicine, men’s health, reconstruction, or andrology (71.1%). The majority (91.3%) see at least one case of prolonged priapism (>36 hours) that requires surgical management yearly. When looking at volume in training and after, our respondents had a significantly higher experience with penile prostheses (over 70%, >=10) as compared to shunts (less than 40%, >=10). Overall, 70.9% of respondents felt more comfortable with a malleable PP than a shunt. However, penile shunts are still preferred as the first line of surgical management by nearly 80% of respondents as compared to 12.7% who instead prefer a PP. We also found that under 40% of respondents currently use penile MRI or corporal biopsies in their management of prolonged assessment. This is the first study to assess current clinical practices in management of IPR globally. As in any anonymous self-reported survey-based research, recall bias, sampling bias are an inherent limitation. Penile shunting for IPR continues to be the preferred treatment despite emerging data. Respondents performed PP surgery routinely and feel more confident placing PP than performing penile shunting procedures.
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spelling pubmed-66798082019-11-11 Current practice in the management of ischemic priapism: An anonymous survey of ISSM members Butaney, Mohit Thirumavalavan, Nannan Rodriguez, Dayron Gross, Martin S. Munarriz, Ricardo Int J Impot Res Article Penile shunting is the standard of care in management of ischemic priapism refractory (IPR) to non-surgical interventions. Due to high rates of impotence, corporal fibrosis, and loss of penile length, recent literature suggests these patients benefit from immediate penile prosthesis (PP) placement. An IRB-exempt anonymous electronic survey of the 2,168 members of the International Society for Sexual Medicine (ISSM) was conducted. The survey included demographic information, confidence and experience related management of IPR. The aim was to evaluate current practice patterns in management of IPR and to investigate the role of immediate PP implantation in the management of prolonged (>36-hours) IPR. The survey response rate was 11.6% (n=251). Most respondents were urologists (173), from the USA (49.1%), and had completed a fellowship in male sexual medicine, men’s health, reconstruction, or andrology (71.1%). The majority (91.3%) see at least one case of prolonged priapism (>36 hours) that requires surgical management yearly. When looking at volume in training and after, our respondents had a significantly higher experience with penile prostheses (over 70%, >=10) as compared to shunts (less than 40%, >=10). Overall, 70.9% of respondents felt more comfortable with a malleable PP than a shunt. However, penile shunts are still preferred as the first line of surgical management by nearly 80% of respondents as compared to 12.7% who instead prefer a PP. We also found that under 40% of respondents currently use penile MRI or corporal biopsies in their management of prolonged assessment. This is the first study to assess current clinical practices in management of IPR globally. As in any anonymous self-reported survey-based research, recall bias, sampling bias are an inherent limitation. Penile shunting for IPR continues to be the preferred treatment despite emerging data. Respondents performed PP surgery routinely and feel more confident placing PP than performing penile shunting procedures. 2019-02-04 2019-11 /pmc/articles/PMC6679808/ /pubmed/30718828 http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41443-019-0120-4 Text en Users may view, print, copy, and download text and data-mine the content in such documents, for the purposes of academic research, subject always to the full Conditions of use:http://www.nature.com/authors/editorial_policies/license.html#terms
spellingShingle Article
Butaney, Mohit
Thirumavalavan, Nannan
Rodriguez, Dayron
Gross, Martin S.
Munarriz, Ricardo
Current practice in the management of ischemic priapism: An anonymous survey of ISSM members
title Current practice in the management of ischemic priapism: An anonymous survey of ISSM members
title_full Current practice in the management of ischemic priapism: An anonymous survey of ISSM members
title_fullStr Current practice in the management of ischemic priapism: An anonymous survey of ISSM members
title_full_unstemmed Current practice in the management of ischemic priapism: An anonymous survey of ISSM members
title_short Current practice in the management of ischemic priapism: An anonymous survey of ISSM members
title_sort current practice in the management of ischemic priapism: an anonymous survey of issm members
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6679808/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30718828
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41443-019-0120-4
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