The Journal of Urology
Volume 171, Issue 6, Part 1 , Pages 2341-2345, June 2004

THE PREVALENCE OF HYPERTENSION, HYPERLIPIDEMIA, DIABETES MELLITUS AND DEPRESSION IN MEN WITH ERECTILE DYSFUNCTION

  • ALLEN D. SEFTEL
  • ,
  • PETER SUN

      Affiliations

    • Corresponding Author InformationCorrespondence: United States Medical Division, Eli Lilly and Co., Drop Code 4025, Building 173/2, Lilly Corporate Center, Indianapolis, Indiana 46285 (telephone: 317-651-8377; FAX: 317-276-0427).
  • ,
  • RALPH SWINDLE

From the School of Medicine, Case Western Reserve University (ADS) and University Hospitals of Cleveland, Cleveland Veterans Affairs Medical Center (ADS), Cleveland, Ohio, and Outcomes Research United States Medical Division, Eli Lilly and Co. Indianapolis (PS, RS), and Department of Psychology, Indiana University-Bloomington (RS), Bloomington, Indiana

Accepted 2 January 2004.

ABSTRACT 

Purpose:

We quantified the prevalence of diagnosed hypertension, hyperlipidemia, diabetes mellitus and depression in male health plan members with erectile dysfunction (ED).

Materials and Methods:

We used a nationally representative managed care claims database that covered 51 health plans with 28 million lives for 1995 through 2002. Based on 272,325 identified patients with ED population and age specific prevalence rates were calculated for the same period.

Results:

The crude population prevalence rates were 41.6% for hypertension, 42.4% for hyperlipidemia, 20.2% for diabetes mellitus, 11.1% for depression, 23.9% for hypertension and hyperlipidemia, 12.8% for hypertension and diabetes mellitus, and 11.5% for hyperlipidemia and depression. The crude age specific prevalence rates varied across age groups significantly for hypertension (4.5% to 68.4%), hyperlipidemia (3.9% to 52.3%), and diabetes mellitus (2.8% to 28.7%), and significantly less for depression (5.8% to 15.0%). Region adjusted population prevalence rates were 41.2% for hypertension, 41.8% for hyperlipidemia, 19.7% for diabetes mellitus and 11.9% for depression. Only 87,163 patients with ED (32%) had no comorbid diagnosis of hypertension, hyperlipidemia, diabetes mellitus or depression.

Conclusion:

Hypertension, hyperlipidemia, diabetes mellitus and depression were prevalent in patients with ED. This evidence supported the proposition that ED shares common risk factors with these 4 concurrent conditions. Therefore, as a pathophysiological event, ED could be viewed as a potential observable marker for these concurrent diseases. This finding suggests that clinicians could include ED in the assessment profile of these concurrent conditions for earlier detection and treatment.

Key Words:  penis , impotence , diabetes mellitus , hypertension , depression

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PII: S0022-5347(05)62162-3

doi:10.1097/01.ju.0000125198.32936.38

Refers to erratum:

  • RE: THE PREVALENCE OF HYPERTENSION, HYPERLIPIDEMIA, DIABETES MELLITUS AND DEPRESSION IN MEN WITH ERECTILE DYSFUNCTION

    A.D. Seftel, P. Sun, R. Swindle
    The Journal of Urology March 2005 (Vol. 173, Issue 3, Page 1050)

The Journal of Urology
Volume 171, Issue 6, Part 1 , Pages 2341-2345, June 2004