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PT-141

Bremelanotide, Vyleesi

Quick Stats
Studies 74
Trials 10
2024 pubmed 2 citations

Gap in Sexual Dysfunction Management Between Male and Female Patients Seen in Primary Care: An Observational Study.

Stanley. Elizabeth E EE; Pfoh. Elizabeth E; Lipold. Laura L; Martinez. Kathryn K

Key Findings

  • Only 22% of FSD diagnoses were made by primary care physicians, versus 40% for ED.
  • Women with FSD were managed (treated or referred) less often (33%) than men with ED (41%).
  • Primary care diagnosis lowered the odds of management for FSD (aOR 0.59) but increased it for ED (aOR 1.52).

Practical Outcomes

  • For biohackers interested in sexual health, this paper doesn’t provide any direct guidance on using the peptide PT-141. It mainly highlights a systemic issue in healthcare delivery rather than offering actionable protocols or dosage information.

Summary

The study looks at how primary care doctors treat female sexual dysfunction (FSD) versus male erectile dysfunction (ED). It finds that women diagnosed by primary care doctors are less likely to get treatment compared to men, highlighting a care gap for female patients.

Abstract

Female sexual dysfunction (FSD), defined as clinically distressing problems with desire, arousal, orgasm, or pain, affects 12% of US women. Despite availability of medications for FSD, primary care physicians (PCPs) report feeling underprepared to manage it. In contrast, erectile dysfunction (ED) is frequently treated in primary care. To describe differences in patterns of FSD and ED diagnosis and management in primary care patients. Retrospective observational study. Primary care patients with an incident diagnosis of FSD or ED seen at a large, integrated health system between 2016 and 2022. Sexual dysfunction management (referral or prescription of a guideline-concordant medication within 3 days of diagnosis), patient characteristics (age, race, insurance type, marital status), and specialty of physician who diagnosed sexual dysfunction. We estimated the odds of FSD and ED management using mixed effects logistic regression in separate models. The sample included 6540 female patients newly diagnosed with FSD and 16,591 male patients newly diagnosed with ED. Twenty-two percent of FSD diagnoses were made by PCPs, and 38% by OB/GYNs. Forty percent of ED diagnoses were made by PCPs and 20% by urologists. Patients with FSD were managed less frequently (33%) than ED patients (41%). The majority of FSD and ED patients who were managed received a medication (96% and 97%, respectively). In the multivariable models, compared to diagnosis by a specialist, diagnosis by a PCP was associated with lower odds of management for FSD patients (aOR, 0.59; 95% CI, 0.51-0.69) and higher odds of management (aOR, 1.52; 95% CI, 1.36-1.64) for ED patients. Primary care patients with FSD are less likely to receive management if they are diagnosed by a PCP than by an OB/GYN. The opposite was true of ED patients, exposing a gap in the quality of care female patients receive.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2024

Date

2024-09-04T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1007/s11606-024-09004-1

Citations

2

References

27