Document detail
ID

doi:10.1038/s41443-024-00915-5...

Author
Pyrgidis, Nikolaos Schulz, Gerald B. Chaloupka, Michael Volz, Yannic Pfitzinger, Paulo L. Berg, Elena Weinhold, Philipp Jokisch, Friedrich Stief, Christian G. Becker, Armin J. Marcon, Julian
Langue
en
Editor

Nature

Category

Urology

Year

2024

listing date

5/29/2024

Keywords
disease sickle cell outcomes = 0 patients hospital stay priapism low-flow
Metrics

Abstract

We aimed to provide evidence on the trends and in-hospital outcomes of patients with low- and high-flow priapism through the largest study in the field.

We used the GeRmAn Nationwide inpatient Data (GRAND), provided by the Research Data Center of the Federal Bureau of Statistics (2008-2021), and performed multiple patient-level analyses.

We included 6,588 men with low-flow and 729 with high-flow priapism.

Among patients with low-flow priapism, 156 (2.4%) suffered from sickle cell disease, and 1,477 (22.4%) patients required shunt surgery.

Of them, only 37 (2.5%) received a concomitant penile prosthesis implantation (30 inflatable and 7 semi-rigid prosthesis).

In Germany, the total number of patients with low-flow priapism requiring hospital stay has steadily increased, while the number of patients with high-flow priapism requiring hospital stay has decreased in the last years.

Among patients with high-flow priapism, 136 (18.7%) required selective artery embolization.

In men with low-flow priapism, sickle cell disease was associated with high rates of exchange transfusion (OR: 21, 95% CI: 14–31, p  < 0.001).

The length of hospital stay ( p  = 0.06) and the intensive care unit admissions ( p  = 0.9) did not differ between patients with low-flow priapism due to sickle cell disease versus other causes of low-flow priapism.

Accordingly, in men with high-flow priapism, embolization was not associated with worse outcomes in terms of length of hospital stay ( p  > 0.9), transfusion ( p  = 0.8), and intensive care unit admission ( p  = 0.5).

Low-flow priapism is an absolute emergency that requires shunt surgery in more than one-fifth of all patients requiring hospital stay.

On the contrary, high-flow priapism is still managed, in most cases, conservatively.

Pyrgidis, Nikolaos,Schulz, Gerald B.,Chaloupka, Michael,Volz, Yannic,Pfitzinger, Paulo L.,Berg, Elena,Weinhold, Philipp,Jokisch, Friedrich,Stief, Christian G.,Becker, Armin J.,Marcon, Julian, 2024, Trends and outcomes of hospitalized patients with priapism in Germany: results from the GRAND study, Nature

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