Surgical and minimally invasive treatment of ischaemic and non-ischaemic priapism: A systematic review by the EAU Sexual and Reproductive Health Guidelines panel

U. Milenkovic, A. Cocci, R. Veeratterapillay, K. Dimitropoulos, L. Boeri, P. Capogrosso, N.C Cilesiz, M. Gul, G. Hatzichristodoulou, V. Modgil, G.I Russo , Tharu Tharakan, M.I. Omar, Carlo Bettocchi, J. Carvalho, Y. Yuhong, G. Corona, H. Jones, Ates Kadioglu, J. I. Martinez-SalamancaP. Verze, E.C Serefoglu, S. Minhas, A. Salonia* (Corresponding Author)

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

5 Citations (Scopus)
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Abstract

Surgical treatments for ischemic priapism (IP) include shunts or penile implants. Non-ischemic priapism (NIP) is usually the result of penile/perineal trauma causing an arterial fistula and embolisation may be required. We conducted a systematic review on behalf of the EAU Sexual and Reproductive health Guidelines panel to analyse the available evidence on efficacy and safety of surgical modalities for IP and NIP. Outcomes were priapism resolution, sexual function and adverse events following surgery. Overall, 63 studies (n = 923) met inclusion criteria up to September 2021. For IP (n = 702), surgery comprised distal (n = 274), proximal shunts (n = 209) and penile prostheses (n = 194). Resolution occurred in 18.7-100% for distal, 5.7–100% for proximal shunts and 100% for penile prostheses. Potency rate was 20–100% for distal, 11.1–77.2% for proximal shunts, and 26.3–100% for penile prostheses, respectively. Patient satisfaction was 60–100% following penile prostheses implantation. Complications were 0–42.5% for shunts and 0–13.6% for IPP. For NIP (n = 221), embolisation success was 85.7–100% and potency 80–100%. The majority of studies were retrospective cohort studies. Risk of bias was high. Overall, surgical shunts have acceptable success rates in IP. Proximal/venous shunts should be abandoned due to morbidity/ED rates. In IP > 48 h, best outcomes are seen with penile prostheses implantation. Embolisation is the mainstay technique for NIP with high resolution rates and adequate erectile function.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)36–49
Number of pages14
JournalInternational Journal of Impotence Research
Volume36
Early online date23 Sept 2022
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Feb 2024

Data Availability Statement

Supplementary information The online version contains supplementary material available at https://doi.org/10.1038/s41443-022-00604-1.

Keywords

  • priapism
  • ischemic
  • non-ischemic
  • surgery
  • embolisation

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