Complementary and Alternative Medicine for Management of Premature Ejaculation: A Systematic Review

Introduction: Premature ejaculation (PE) is defined as ejaculation within 1 minute (lifelong PE) or 3 minutes (acquired PE), inability to delay ejaculation, and negative personal consequences. Management includes behavioral and pharmacologic approaches. Aim: To systematically review effectiveness, s...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Katy Cooper, PhD, Marrissa Martyn-St James, PhD, Eva Kaltenthaler, PhD, Kath Dickinson, MA, Anna Cantrell, MA, Shijie Ren, PhD, Kevan Wylie, MD, Leila Frodsham, MBChB, MRCoG, Catherine Hood, BA, BMBCh (oxon)
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2017-03-01
Series:Sexual Medicine
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2050116116300721
id doaj-ec139903fbf34122b4eb00c99adb7bc9
record_format Article
spelling doaj-ec139903fbf34122b4eb00c99adb7bc92020-11-24T21:20:17ZengElsevierSexual Medicine2050-11612017-03-0151e1e1810.1016/j.esxm.2016.08.002Complementary and Alternative Medicine for Management of Premature Ejaculation: A Systematic ReviewKaty Cooper, PhD0Marrissa Martyn-St James, PhD1Eva Kaltenthaler, PhD2Kath Dickinson, MA3Anna Cantrell, MA4Shijie Ren, PhD5Kevan Wylie, MD6Leila Frodsham, MBChB, MRCoG7Catherine Hood, BA, BMBCh (oxon)8University of Sheffield, Sheffield, UKUniversity of Sheffield, Sheffield, UKUniversity of Sheffield, Sheffield, UKUniversity of Sheffield, Sheffield, UKUniversity of Sheffield, Sheffield, UKUniversity of Sheffield, Sheffield, UKPorterbrook Clinic, Sheffield, UKInstitute of Psychosexual Medicine, London, UKImperial College, London, UKIntroduction: Premature ejaculation (PE) is defined as ejaculation within 1 minute (lifelong PE) or 3 minutes (acquired PE), inability to delay ejaculation, and negative personal consequences. Management includes behavioral and pharmacologic approaches. Aim: To systematically review effectiveness, safety, and robustness of evidence for complementary and alternative medicine in managing PE. Methods: Nine databases including Medline were searched through September 2015. Randomized controlled trials evaluating complementary and alternative medicine for PE were included. Main Outcome Measures: Studies were included if they reported on intravaginal ejaculatory latency time (IELT) and/or another validated PE measurement. Adverse effects were summarized. Results: Ten randomized controlled trials were included. Two assessed acupuncture, five assessed Chinese herbal medicine, one assessed Ayurvedic herbal medicine, and two assessed topical “severance secret” cream. Risk of bias was unclear in all studies because of unclear allocation concealment or blinding, and only five studies reported stopwatch-measured IELT. Acupuncture slightly increased IELT over placebo in one study (mean difference [MD] = 0.55 minute, P = .001). In another study, Ayurvedic herbal medicine slightly increased IELT over placebo (MD = 0.80 minute, P = .001). Topical severance secret cream increased IELT over placebo in two studies (MD = 8.60 minutes, P < .001), although inclusion criteria were broad (IELT < 3 minutes). Three studies comparing Chinese herbal medicine with selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) favored SSRIs (MD = 1.01 minutes, P = .02). However, combination treatment with Chinese medicine plus SSRIs improved IELT over SSRIs alone (two studies; MD = 1.92 minutes, P < .00001) and over Chinese medicine alone (two studies; MD = 2.52 minutes, P < .00001). Adverse effects were not consistently assessed but where reported were generally mild. Conclusion: There is preliminary evidence for the effectiveness of acupuncture, Chinese herbal medicine, Ayurvedic herbal medicine, and topical severance secret cream in improving IELT and other outcomes. However, results are based on clinically heterogeneous studies of unclear quality. There are sparse data on adverse effects or potential for drug interactions. Further well-conducted randomized controlled trials would be valuable.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2050116116300721ReviewSystematicPremature EjaculationComplementary TherapiesComplementary Medicine
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Katy Cooper, PhD
Marrissa Martyn-St James, PhD
Eva Kaltenthaler, PhD
Kath Dickinson, MA
Anna Cantrell, MA
Shijie Ren, PhD
Kevan Wylie, MD
Leila Frodsham, MBChB, MRCoG
Catherine Hood, BA, BMBCh (oxon)
spellingShingle Katy Cooper, PhD
Marrissa Martyn-St James, PhD
Eva Kaltenthaler, PhD
Kath Dickinson, MA
Anna Cantrell, MA
Shijie Ren, PhD
Kevan Wylie, MD
Leila Frodsham, MBChB, MRCoG
Catherine Hood, BA, BMBCh (oxon)
Complementary and Alternative Medicine for Management of Premature Ejaculation: A Systematic Review
Sexual Medicine
Review
Systematic
Premature Ejaculation
Complementary Therapies
Complementary Medicine
author_facet Katy Cooper, PhD
Marrissa Martyn-St James, PhD
Eva Kaltenthaler, PhD
Kath Dickinson, MA
Anna Cantrell, MA
Shijie Ren, PhD
Kevan Wylie, MD
Leila Frodsham, MBChB, MRCoG
Catherine Hood, BA, BMBCh (oxon)
author_sort Katy Cooper, PhD
title Complementary and Alternative Medicine for Management of Premature Ejaculation: A Systematic Review
title_short Complementary and Alternative Medicine for Management of Premature Ejaculation: A Systematic Review
title_full Complementary and Alternative Medicine for Management of Premature Ejaculation: A Systematic Review
title_fullStr Complementary and Alternative Medicine for Management of Premature Ejaculation: A Systematic Review
title_full_unstemmed Complementary and Alternative Medicine for Management of Premature Ejaculation: A Systematic Review
title_sort complementary and alternative medicine for management of premature ejaculation: a systematic review
publisher Elsevier
series Sexual Medicine
issn 2050-1161
publishDate 2017-03-01
description Introduction: Premature ejaculation (PE) is defined as ejaculation within 1 minute (lifelong PE) or 3 minutes (acquired PE), inability to delay ejaculation, and negative personal consequences. Management includes behavioral and pharmacologic approaches. Aim: To systematically review effectiveness, safety, and robustness of evidence for complementary and alternative medicine in managing PE. Methods: Nine databases including Medline were searched through September 2015. Randomized controlled trials evaluating complementary and alternative medicine for PE were included. Main Outcome Measures: Studies were included if they reported on intravaginal ejaculatory latency time (IELT) and/or another validated PE measurement. Adverse effects were summarized. Results: Ten randomized controlled trials were included. Two assessed acupuncture, five assessed Chinese herbal medicine, one assessed Ayurvedic herbal medicine, and two assessed topical “severance secret” cream. Risk of bias was unclear in all studies because of unclear allocation concealment or blinding, and only five studies reported stopwatch-measured IELT. Acupuncture slightly increased IELT over placebo in one study (mean difference [MD] = 0.55 minute, P = .001). In another study, Ayurvedic herbal medicine slightly increased IELT over placebo (MD = 0.80 minute, P = .001). Topical severance secret cream increased IELT over placebo in two studies (MD = 8.60 minutes, P < .001), although inclusion criteria were broad (IELT < 3 minutes). Three studies comparing Chinese herbal medicine with selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) favored SSRIs (MD = 1.01 minutes, P = .02). However, combination treatment with Chinese medicine plus SSRIs improved IELT over SSRIs alone (two studies; MD = 1.92 minutes, P < .00001) and over Chinese medicine alone (two studies; MD = 2.52 minutes, P < .00001). Adverse effects were not consistently assessed but where reported were generally mild. Conclusion: There is preliminary evidence for the effectiveness of acupuncture, Chinese herbal medicine, Ayurvedic herbal medicine, and topical severance secret cream in improving IELT and other outcomes. However, results are based on clinically heterogeneous studies of unclear quality. There are sparse data on adverse effects or potential for drug interactions. Further well-conducted randomized controlled trials would be valuable.
topic Review
Systematic
Premature Ejaculation
Complementary Therapies
Complementary Medicine
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2050116116300721
work_keys_str_mv AT katycooperphd complementaryandalternativemedicineformanagementofprematureejaculationasystematicreview
AT marrissamartynstjamesphd complementaryandalternativemedicineformanagementofprematureejaculationasystematicreview
AT evakaltenthalerphd complementaryandalternativemedicineformanagementofprematureejaculationasystematicreview
AT kathdickinsonma complementaryandalternativemedicineformanagementofprematureejaculationasystematicreview
AT annacantrellma complementaryandalternativemedicineformanagementofprematureejaculationasystematicreview
AT shijierenphd complementaryandalternativemedicineformanagementofprematureejaculationasystematicreview
AT kevanwyliemd complementaryandalternativemedicineformanagementofprematureejaculationasystematicreview
AT leilafrodshammbchbmrcog complementaryandalternativemedicineformanagementofprematureejaculationasystematicreview
AT catherinehoodbabmbchoxon complementaryandalternativemedicineformanagementofprematureejaculationasystematicreview
_version_ 1726003099992064000