The Co-occurring Syndrome-Coexisting Erectile Dysfunction and Benign Prostatic Hyperplasia and Their Clinical Correlates in Aging Men: Results From the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey. Journal Article


Authors: Egan, KB; Burnett, AL; McVary, KT; Ni, X; Suh, M; Wong, DG; Rosen, RC
Article Title: The Co-occurring Syndrome-Coexisting Erectile Dysfunction and Benign Prostatic Hyperplasia and Their Clinical Correlates in Aging Men: Results From the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey.
Abstract: OBJECTIVE: To establish a descriptive profile of men with coexistent erectile dysfunction (ED) and/or benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH), ED only or BPH only compared to those with neither condition and to identify the determinants of coexisting disease. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Self-report and/or medication use measures defining ED and BPH were assessed in men aged =40 years (N = 2142) between 2001 and 2004 using the National Health and Nutrition Examination Surveys. Descriptive analyses examined the ED and/or BPH covariate distribution. Logistic regressions calculated odds ratios (ORs, 95% confidence interval) comparing men with ED and/or BPH, BPH only, or ED only to men with neither condition. RESULTS: Of 393 men with BPH, 57.8% had coexistent ED, confirming the moderately strong co-occurrence of the conditions (P .0001). Coexisting ED and/or BPH occurred in 10.6% of participants, whereas 24.4% and 7.7% reported ED and BPH. After age 60, the odds of reporting ED, BPH, or ED/BPH vs neither almost tripled per decade of increasing age, corresponding to prevalence increases. The unadjusted odds of ED and/or BPH vs no disease increased 1.3 times per prostate-specific antigen unit (ng/mL) increase and 1.1 times per C-reactive protein unit (mg/dL) increase. Other predisposing factors for ED and/or BPH included higher body mass index (OR = 2.5), increased antidiabetic (OR = 2.9) or proton pump inhibitor use (OR = 2.3), increased healthcare visits (=4; OR = 3.5), and more frequent urinary voiding difficulties (OR = 9.7). CONCLUSION: Co-occurring ED and/or BPH is evident in ~10% of men =40 years old and is associated with significant clinical correlates. Clinicians need to pay greater attention to this clinically important syndrome in aging men.
Journal Title: Urology
ISSN: 1527-9995; 0090-4295
Publisher: Elsevier Inc  
Date Published: 2015