Objectives: Intraoperative nerve stimulation has been used to map the course of cavernosal nerve bundles to aid in nerve-sparing radical prostatectomy (RP). We sought to determine whether the intraoperative nerve stimulation response after removal of the prostate specimen predicts postoperative potency.
Methods: We prospectively evaluated 63 consecutive patients undergoing RP. Among these 63 patients, 41 patients had a bilateral nerve-sparing procedure, and 22 underwent bilateral wide resection of the neurovascular bundles. Potency was determined at 1 year by direct patient interview.
Results: Of the 22 patients with wide resection, 16 (73%) had no observed stimulated response, 4 (18%) had a measurable tumescence response, and 2 (9%) had detumescence. All 22 patients were impotent postoperatively. At a minimum follow-up of 1 year, of the 41 patients who underwent nerve-sparing RP, 27 (66%) had postoperative erections sufficient for penetration. Of the 30 men with an intraoperative stimulated tumescence response, 24 (80%) were potent; of the 6 with a detumescence response, 2 (33%) were potent; and of the 5 with no stimulated nerve response, 1 (20%) was potent. A tumescence response was significantly more predictive of postoperative potency than no intraoperative response (P = 0.017).
Conclusions: An intraoperative tumescence response with stimulation of the neurovascular bundles after prostate specimen removal is more likely to correspond to successful postoperative sexual function after nerve-sparing RP than is no response.