Effect
Of Non-Steroidal Anti-Inflammatory Drug Use
On The Incidence Of Erectile Dysfunction
May 20, 2006
Arthritis and erectile
dysfunction (ED) affect men more as they
age. In this article, R. Shiri and colleagues
of the Tampere School of Public Health of Tampere
Finland first list several prior articles that
show that the occurrence of these two diseases
correlates well.
They then correlate the use of non-steroidal
anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAID) used for treatment
of arthritis and other ailments with their effects
on ED. Their study used a sub-set of the Tampere
Aging Male Urological Study and involved data
derived from 1,126 men who began the study without
evidence of ED. Of these, 101 used NSAIDs and
most (58%) also reported arthritis symptoms.
However, of 256 men who separately reported
arthritis symptoms, only 23% used NSAIDS. After
multivariate adjustment, the relative increased
risk for ED amongst those using NSAIDs versus
not using, was 1.8. Also, ED risk was low in
men without arthritis and who used no NSAIDs.
When age adjustment was applied, the relative
risk of ED with NSAIDs climbed to 2.4. In men
without arthritis who still used NSAIDs, the
relative risk of ED was 2.0, still elevated
when compared to non-NSAID users.
The authors conclude that use
of NSAIDs increased risk of ED and could not
be correlated directly with the presence or
absence of arthritis. They suggest that NSAIDs
compete with arachidonic acid and inhibit the
synthesis of prostaglandins and thromboxane.
NSAIDS may therefore interfere with the nitric
oxide pathway that is essential for the erectile
process. They believe that their stratification
of the results shows that increased risk of
ED was related to NSAID use but not to the disease
arthritis itself. They estimate that the “population
etiological fraction of ED due to NSAID drug
use was 16.7%”.
In an editorial comment, Kevin T. McVary of
Northwestern University, Chicago, USA, notes
that for their 2 questions used to estimate
ED, “the question of validation remains.”
He then suggests more elaborate questionnaires
(Short Form 30) that might better estimate the
relationship between ED, arthritis and NSAID
use. Finally, he calls on use of more stringent
epidemiologic principles (Hill's causality method)
that might be able to verify a stronger relationship.
Clearly, “additional confirmatory studies”
are needed.
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