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Sexuality in patients treated for penile cancer: patients' experience and doctors' judgement
Author(s) -
OPJORDSMOEN S.,
WAEHRE H.,
AASS N.,
FOSSA S.D.
Publication year - 1994
Publication title -
british journal of urology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.773
H-Index - 148
eISSN - 1464-410X
pISSN - 0007-1331
DOI - 10.1111/j.1464-410x.1994.tb07643.x
Subject(s) - penectomy , medicine , human sexuality , penile cancer , quality of life (healthcare) , psychosocial , radiation therapy , penis , sexual dysfunction , cancer , erectile dysfunction , surgery , psychiatry , nursing , gender studies , sociology
Objective To evaluate sexuality after successful treatment of penile cancer. Patients and methods Post‐therapy sexuality was evaluated in 30 men (median age 57 years; range 28–75) treated for cancer of the penis 80 months previously (median; range: 11–225 months). Treatment regimes were: local excision/laser beam treatment, 5; definitive radio‐therapy, 12; partial penectomy, 9; total penectomy, 4. Patients underwent a semi‐structured interview and completed three self‐administered questionnaires (psychosocial adjustment to severe illness [PAIS], mental symptoms [GHQ], quality of life [EORTC QLQ C‐30]). A global score of overall sexual functioning was constructed consisting of sexual interest, sexual ability, sexual satisfaction, sexual identity, partner relationship and frequency of coitus. Results In 10 of 12 patients treated by irradiation the sexual global score was not or only slightly reduced compared with two of nine patients after partial penectomy and one of five patients with local surgery/laser beam treatment. All four patients who had undergone total penectomy recorded a severely reduced sexual global score. Of the six single domains, sexual identity and partner relationship did not change with increasing age, whereas the other scores of sexual life deteriorated as the patient became older. In the patients treated by irradiation doctors evaluated the patients' post‐treatment sexuality to be more impaired than that experienced by the patients. Conclusion Within the limitations due to the small number of patients studied, radiotherapy seems to be the treatment of choice in limited cancer of the penis if preservation of sexuality is a major therapeutic aim. Physicians counselling patients with this rare malignancy need more information about treatment‐related problems of sexuality after different therapeutic modalities.