Saturday 6 September 2008

Study Shows PDE5 Inhibitor More Effective When Used On-Demand In Erectile Dysfunction

�European Urology, the official journal of the European Association of Urology will be featuring the article 'Effect of nightly versus on-demand vardenafil on recovery of cavernous function in men following bilateral nerve-sparing radical prostatectomy' by F. Montorsi et al.in the October issue, showing for the first meter that vardenafil, a PDE5 inhibitor, is more efficacious when used on-demand in men with erectile disfunction, supporting a shift towards on-demand dosing with PDE5 inhibitors in this patient group. 87 centres across Europe, the US, Canada and South Africa participated between December 2004 and September 2007.


Nerve-sparing group prostatectomy (NSRP) is the gold-standard therapy for prostate gland cancer in men with a life expectancy of 10 age or more than. The risk of erectile dysfunction (ED) following NSRP is significant. This is caused by neuropraxia - the commonly temporary failure of heart conduction in the absence of morphological changes due to compression, ischemia or blunt injury - which inevitably occurs during the procedure. Ultimately this may lead to the development of fibrosis within the corpus cavernosa and cause ED.


To prevent the onset of postoperative ED, the use of phosphodiesterase type 5 (PDE5) inhibitors was introduced. These agents prevent the breakdown of cyclic guanosine monophosphate in cavernosal tissue, which plays a persona in the prevention of cell expiry and fibrosis, and may thus exert a protective effect on cavernosal smooth muscle.


Participants were recruited to this first robustly designed, evidence-based, multi-centre study approximately unitary month before they were scheduled to undergo NSRP. A number of 423 patients completed the study. The inclusion of the on-demand dosing regimen enabled comparison of the presently recommended guidelines for the use of PDE5 inhibitors with a proposed nightly dosing regime, which was suggested to have potential difference positive personal effects on erectile function. The results clearly show that nightly dosing with vardenafil does not have any effect beyond that of on-demand use.


The written report shows that on-demand use of levitra during the treatment period was associated with importantly greater cavernous function and sexual intercourse completion rates compared to placebo. The success rates for the vardenafil on-demand group were also higher than for the nightly group. These data show that the use of on-demand levitra is of greater benefit than nightly treatment in patients following NSRP surgery and, in general, support the on-demand use of PDE5 inhibitors following NSRP surgery over a casual dosing regime. This prompts reconsideration of the current practice of prescribing nightly PDE5 inhibitor therapy, as on-demand purpose of vardenafil is as effective in men with ED following NSRP, a notoriously difficult-to-treat patient population.

Elsevier


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