Purpose: To establish a psychometric validated pelvic fracture-urethral injury postoperative erectile function patient reported outcome measure (PFUI pEF PROM). We also aim to explore PFUI patients' potential classification and suitable postoperative erectile function assessment pattern.
Methods: A total of 93 PFUI patients who treated by excision and primary anastomotic (EPA) urethroplasty from January 2020 to August 2022 were enrolled to this study. Patients who had intercourse completed the IIEF-5, those who had sexual stimulation other than intercourse finished PFUI pEF PROM, and those who performed both completed the IIEF-5, and PFUI pEF PROM. Erection Hardness Score (EHS) was completed by all patients. This PROM was performed psychometric validation and used to find PFUI patients potential classification through latent class analysis. Then, we determined the cut-off value though receiver-operating characteristic (ROC) curve and performed univariate analysis subgroups feature.
Results: The PFUI pEF PROM demonstrated high reliability and validity with a Cronbach's alpha of 0.928. It correlated significantly with IIEF-5 (r = 0.550, p < 0.001) and EHS (r = 0.909, p < 0.001). The latent class analysis identified three patient subgroups, with 14.5 as the subgroup cut-off value. Urethral stricture length, IIEF-5, and EHS score were identified as influence factors for maximal erection potential. An assessment pattern combining IIEF-5, EHS, and the PFUI pEF PROM covered 92.5% of patients.
Conclusion: This PROM effectively addresses the current limitation in assessing erectile function in PFUI patients. This study provides a promising tool for stratified assessment, prediction erection recovery, and treatment guidance in the PFUI Erectile dysfunction field.
Keywords: Erectile dysfunction; Erectile function evaluation; Patient-reported outcome measures (PROMs); Pelvic fracture-urethral injury (PFUI).
© 2024. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature B.V.