AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates the impact of hypogonadism on the outcomes of artificial urinary sphincter (AUS) and inflatable penile prosthesis (IPP) surgeries, hypothesizing that these patients face higher risks of complications, reinterventions, and infections.
  • Results indicate that while hypogonadal patients show increased complications and reintervention rates generally, significant differences arise mostly in infection rates for IPP surgeries.
  • The findings suggest that testosterone replacement therapy (TRT) may not fully mitigate infection risks in hypogonadal patients, indicating the need for additional research to explore these limitations.

Article Abstract

Objective: To determine the role of androgens in penile and urethral health, we sought to understand what impact hypogonadism may have on artificial urinary sphincter (AUS) and inflatable penile prosthesis (IPP) outcomes. We hypothesize that patients with hypogonadism are at increased risk of reinterventions, complications, and infections.

Methods: We queried the TriNetX Global Database in March 2023 for patients receiving an AUS or IPP, looking at lifetime reintervention, complication, and infection rates. We conducted multiple comparisons: (1) eugonadal patients against hypogonadal patients, (2) hypogonadal patients on testosterone replacement therapy (TRT) against hypogonadal patients not on TRT, and (3) hypogonadal patients on TRT against eugonadal patients.

Results: Hypogonadal patients undergoing AUS had more complications (33.5% vs 28.3%), higher reintervention rates (27.7% vs 24.3%) and higher infection rates (7.3% vs 6.8%), albeit none reaching significance. Hypogonadal patients undergoing IPP had significantly higher infection rates (6.3% vs 4.4%, RR 1.5 (1.04, 2.04)) and reintervention rates (14.9% vs 11.9%, RR 1.3 (1.04, 1.61)), but not complication rates (21.9% vs 18.9%). When comparing patients with hypogonadism on TRT vs off TRT, there was not a significant difference in reinterventions, or complications, in AUS and IPP patients, but there were significantly more infections in IPP patients (7.0% vs 3.9%, RR 1.9 (1.002, 3.5)).

Conclusion: Hypogonadal patients have more reinterventions, complications, and infections following urologic implant surgery, to varying levels of significance. TRT may not be completely protective to improve tissue health but with many limitations that should be explored in further research.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.urology.2023.10.027DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

hypogonadal patients
28
patients
14
patients undergoing
12
reinterventions complications
12
infection rates
12
urethral health
8
artificial urinary
8
urinary sphincter
8
inflatable penile
8
penile prosthesis
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!