Impact of chronic prostatitis-like symptoms on the quality of life in a large group of men.

Standard

Impact of chronic prostatitis-like symptoms on the quality of life in a large group of men. / Walz, Jochen; Perrotte, Paul; Hutterer, Georg; Suardi, Nazareno; Jeldres, Claudio; Bénard, Francois; Valiquette, Luc; Karakiewicz, Pierre I.

In: BJU INT, Vol. 100, No. 6, 6, 2007, p. 1307-1311.

Research output: SCORING: Contribution to journalSCORING: Journal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Walz, J, Perrotte, P, Hutterer, G, Suardi, N, Jeldres, C, Bénard, F, Valiquette, L & Karakiewicz, PI 2007, 'Impact of chronic prostatitis-like symptoms on the quality of life in a large group of men.', BJU INT, vol. 100, no. 6, 6, pp. 1307-1311. <http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17941922?dopt=Citation>

APA

Walz, J., Perrotte, P., Hutterer, G., Suardi, N., Jeldres, C., Bénard, F., Valiquette, L., & Karakiewicz, P. I. (2007). Impact of chronic prostatitis-like symptoms on the quality of life in a large group of men. BJU INT, 100(6), 1307-1311. [6]. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17941922?dopt=Citation

Vancouver

Walz J, Perrotte P, Hutterer G, Suardi N, Jeldres C, Bénard F et al. Impact of chronic prostatitis-like symptoms on the quality of life in a large group of men. BJU INT. 2007;100(6):1307-1311. 6.

Bibtex

@article{d67b85dd4174448d987b70bc68cf2985,
title = "Impact of chronic prostatitis-like symptoms on the quality of life in a large group of men.",
abstract = "OBJECTIVE: To assess the prevalence of chronic prostatitis (CP) and chronic pelvic pain syndrome (CPPS) symptoms in a large group of men, using the National Institute of Health-Chronic Prostatitis Symptom Index (NIH-CPSI), and to evaluate which of the NIH-CPSI symptoms had the most detrimental effect on quality of life (QoL). SUBJECTS AND METHODS: The NIH-CPSI was completed by 1273 men during a male-health promotion event. The presence of CP/CPPS-like symptoms was defined according to the NIH-CPSI criteria (perineal pain or ejaculatory pain and NIH-CPSI-pain score >/= 4). Finally, using linear regression analyses we evaluated the effect of each questionnaire symptom on the NIH-CPSI-QoL domain. RESULTS: The mean (range) age of the men was 57.6 (40-89) years; 133 (10.5%) reported CP/CPPS-like symptoms, with 62 (4.9%) reporting mild and 71 (5.6%) reporting moderate to severe CP/CPPS-like symptoms. Men with CP/CPPS-like symptoms had higher NIH-CPSI-QoL scores, showing a greater detriment of QoL (4.9 vs 2.5; P <0.001). Of all NIH-CPSI symptoms, urinary frequency was associated with the least favourable QoL, followed by incomplete bladder emptying, pain frequency and pain intensity. The individual pain location had no significant impact on the QoL. CONCLUSION: In a large healthy population CP/CPPS-like symptoms are common and have an important impact on QoL. Functional CP/CPPS-like symptoms have a greater detrimental effect on QoL than pain symptoms. Therefore, these symptoms should represent the main therapeutic targets in affected patients.",
author = "Jochen Walz and Paul Perrotte and Georg Hutterer and Nazareno Suardi and Claudio Jeldres and Francois B{\'e}nard and Luc Valiquette and Karakiewicz, {Pierre I}",
year = "2007",
language = "Deutsch",
volume = "100",
pages = "1307--1311",
journal = "BJU INT",
issn = "1464-4096",
publisher = "Wiley-Blackwell",
number = "6",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Impact of chronic prostatitis-like symptoms on the quality of life in a large group of men.

AU - Walz, Jochen

AU - Perrotte, Paul

AU - Hutterer, Georg

AU - Suardi, Nazareno

AU - Jeldres, Claudio

AU - Bénard, Francois

AU - Valiquette, Luc

AU - Karakiewicz, Pierre I

PY - 2007

Y1 - 2007

N2 - OBJECTIVE: To assess the prevalence of chronic prostatitis (CP) and chronic pelvic pain syndrome (CPPS) symptoms in a large group of men, using the National Institute of Health-Chronic Prostatitis Symptom Index (NIH-CPSI), and to evaluate which of the NIH-CPSI symptoms had the most detrimental effect on quality of life (QoL). SUBJECTS AND METHODS: The NIH-CPSI was completed by 1273 men during a male-health promotion event. The presence of CP/CPPS-like symptoms was defined according to the NIH-CPSI criteria (perineal pain or ejaculatory pain and NIH-CPSI-pain score >/= 4). Finally, using linear regression analyses we evaluated the effect of each questionnaire symptom on the NIH-CPSI-QoL domain. RESULTS: The mean (range) age of the men was 57.6 (40-89) years; 133 (10.5%) reported CP/CPPS-like symptoms, with 62 (4.9%) reporting mild and 71 (5.6%) reporting moderate to severe CP/CPPS-like symptoms. Men with CP/CPPS-like symptoms had higher NIH-CPSI-QoL scores, showing a greater detriment of QoL (4.9 vs 2.5; P <0.001). Of all NIH-CPSI symptoms, urinary frequency was associated with the least favourable QoL, followed by incomplete bladder emptying, pain frequency and pain intensity. The individual pain location had no significant impact on the QoL. CONCLUSION: In a large healthy population CP/CPPS-like symptoms are common and have an important impact on QoL. Functional CP/CPPS-like symptoms have a greater detrimental effect on QoL than pain symptoms. Therefore, these symptoms should represent the main therapeutic targets in affected patients.

AB - OBJECTIVE: To assess the prevalence of chronic prostatitis (CP) and chronic pelvic pain syndrome (CPPS) symptoms in a large group of men, using the National Institute of Health-Chronic Prostatitis Symptom Index (NIH-CPSI), and to evaluate which of the NIH-CPSI symptoms had the most detrimental effect on quality of life (QoL). SUBJECTS AND METHODS: The NIH-CPSI was completed by 1273 men during a male-health promotion event. The presence of CP/CPPS-like symptoms was defined according to the NIH-CPSI criteria (perineal pain or ejaculatory pain and NIH-CPSI-pain score >/= 4). Finally, using linear regression analyses we evaluated the effect of each questionnaire symptom on the NIH-CPSI-QoL domain. RESULTS: The mean (range) age of the men was 57.6 (40-89) years; 133 (10.5%) reported CP/CPPS-like symptoms, with 62 (4.9%) reporting mild and 71 (5.6%) reporting moderate to severe CP/CPPS-like symptoms. Men with CP/CPPS-like symptoms had higher NIH-CPSI-QoL scores, showing a greater detriment of QoL (4.9 vs 2.5; P <0.001). Of all NIH-CPSI symptoms, urinary frequency was associated with the least favourable QoL, followed by incomplete bladder emptying, pain frequency and pain intensity. The individual pain location had no significant impact on the QoL. CONCLUSION: In a large healthy population CP/CPPS-like symptoms are common and have an important impact on QoL. Functional CP/CPPS-like symptoms have a greater detrimental effect on QoL than pain symptoms. Therefore, these symptoms should represent the main therapeutic targets in affected patients.

M3 - SCORING: Zeitschriftenaufsatz

VL - 100

SP - 1307

EP - 1311

JO - BJU INT

JF - BJU INT

SN - 1464-4096

IS - 6

M1 - 6

ER -