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Erectile Dysfunction (ED)

NICE CKS Erectile dysfunction. Last revised: Sep 2025.

NICE BNF Treatment summaries. Erectile dysfunction.

EAU Guidelines Sexual and Reproductive Health. 5. Management of Erectile Dysfunction. Last updated: Mar 2025.

Background Information

Definition

ED is defined as the persistent inability to attain and maintain an erection sufficient to permit satisfactory sexual performance.

Note that erectile dysfunction is a symptom, not a disease.

Aetiology

Aetiology of ED is traditionally classified into:

  • Organic, and
  • Psychogenic

However, most cases of ED are actually of mixed aetiology.

Organic Causes

Vasculogenic – most common
  • Cardiovascular disease
  • Diabetes mellitus
  • Smoking
  • Metabolic syndrome, hyperlipidaemia, obesity
  • Lack of regular physical exercise
Neurogenic Peripheral causes
  • Diabetes mellitus (autonomic neuropathy)
  • Chronic renal failure / chronic liver failure
  • Prostate cancer interventions (radical prostatectomy and radical radiotherapy)
    • Other pelvic surgery e.g. radical cystectomy, colorectal surgery
  • Surgery of the urethra (urethral stricture, open urethroplasty, etc.)

Central causes

  • Degenerative disorders (e.g. MS, PD, multiple atrophy)
  • Stroke
  • Spinal cord trauma / disease
  • CNS tumours
Hormonal
  • Hypogonadism
  • Hyperthyroidism
  • Hypercortisolism (Cushing’s syndrome) and hypocortisolism (adrenal insufficiency)
Anatomical
  • Peyronie’s disease
  • Phimosis
  • Hypospadias
  • Micropenis
  • Penile cancer (and other tumours of the external genitalia)
Trauma
  • Penile fracture
  • Pelvic fracture
Drug-induced
  • Antihypertensives (beta blockers and thiazide diuretics)
  • Antidepressants (esp. SSRIs)
  • Antipsychotics
  • Antiandrogens (5 alpha reductase inhibitors, GnRH agonist and antagonists)
  • Recreational drugs (e.g. heroin, cocaine, marijuana, methadone, synthetic drugs, anabolic steroids, excessive alcohol intake)

Psychogenic Causes

Generalised
  • Lack of arousability
  • Disorders of sexual intimacy
Situational
  • Partner-related
  • Relationship issues
  • Performance anxiety

Diagnosis

ED itself is a clinical diagnosis, investigations are performed to identify underlying causes of ED

History Taking

ED-focused history taking that differentiates between organic and psychogenic causes:

History Domain Key questions to ask Suggests organic ED Suggests psychogenic ED
Onset “When did the problem start?” Gradual, progressive onset Sudden onset
Course “Has it been getting worse over time?” Progressive deterioration Fluctuating, intermittent
Situational vs Global “Does it happen in all situations or only with a partner?” Present in all settings (all partners and masturbation) Situation-specific (e.g. only with a specific partner, or only with partner but normal with masturbation)
Morning Erections “Do you still get morning erections?” Absent or reduced Preserved
Libido (sexual desire) “Has your sex drive changed?” Reduced libido Normal libido
Erection Quality “Is it difficult to get an erection or to maintain one?” Both initiation and maintenance affected Usually maintenance issue
Ejaculation / Orgasm “Any issues with ejaculation or orgasm?” May be abnormal Usually normal
Psychological stressors “Any recent stress, anxiety or relationship issues?” May coexist but not primary Strong association
Performance anxiety “Does worrying about performance make it worse?” Minimal effect Key feature

A validated questionnaire related to ED should be used to assess all sexual function domains (e.g. International Index of Erectile Function) and the effect of a specific treatment modality

Cardiovascular Risk Assessment

Patients who seek treatment for sexual dysfunction have a high prevalence of cardiovascular disease:

  • ED significantly increases the risk of cardiovascular disease, coronary heart disease, stroke, atrial fibrillation, cardiovascular and all-cause mortality
  • ED should be considered a precursor of CVD

Therefore, it is important to perform cardiovascular risk assessment in ED patients with no overt disease or cardiac symptoms

 

Assess the cardiac risk of sexual activity. High risk is defined as ANY of the following:

  • Unstable or refractory angina
  • Recent MI (within the last 2 weeks)
  • Reduced ejection fraction heart failure (NYHA class IV)
  • Uncontrolled hypertension
  • High-risk arrhythmia (exercise-induced ventricular tachycardia, implanted internal cardioverter defibrillator with frequent shocks, and poorly controlled atrial fibrillation)
  • Hypertrophic obstructive or other cardiomyopathy
  • Moderate-to-severe VHD

If the patient is considered high cardiac risk of sexual activity, all sexual activity should be stopped until specialist assessment

Physical Examination

All patients should be given a physical examination focused on:

  • Genitourinary system – check for penile structural abnormalities, testicular abnormalities
  • Endocrine system – check for signs of hypogonadism (e.g. testicular atrophy, alterations in secondary sexual characteristics, sparse body hair, gynaecomastia, reduced muscle mass)
  • Cardiovascular system
  • Neurological system – check for neuropathy

 

The following should be measured / assessed:

  • Heart rate
  • Blood pressure
  • BMI or waist circumference

Laboratory Testing

Testing for ALL patients:

  • Fasting blood glucose or HbA1c
  • Lipid profile
  • Fasting serum total testosterone (9-11 am)

If serum testosterone is low or borderline:

  • Repeat serum testosterone, and
  • Measure LH, FSH, SHBG, prolactin level

Additional investigations to consider, depending on the underlying cause and clinical judgement:

FBC Anaemia can contribute to reduced libido
U&E CKD is associated with ED
LFTs Chronic liver disease is associated with ED
TFTs Both hyper- or hypothyroidism can cause ED
PSA If prostate cancer is suspected

Advanced Work-Up Tests

The following are NOT routinely necessary, and are only performed in secondary care:

  • Psychopathological and psychosocial assessment – for psychogenic ED
  • Nocturnal penile tumescence and rigidity test – objectively differentiate between organic and psychogenic ED (patients with psychogenic ED usually have normal findings in the NPTR test)
  • Intracavernous injection test
  • Dynamic duplex ultrasound of the penis – usually used if vasculogenic aetiology is suspected
  • Arteriography and dynamic infusion cavernosometry or cavernosography – only in patients who are being considered for penile revascularisation

Management

Referral Criteria

Speciality of referral Indication
Urology ANY of the following:
  • Patient is young
  • Lifelong history of ED (due to possible primary ED)
  • History of pelvic / perineal / genital trauma
  • Presence of penile structural abnormality or abnormal testicular examination
Cardiology ANY of the following:
  • High cardiac risk of sexual activity – stop ALL sexual activity until specialist assessment
  • PDE-5 inhibitors are contraindicated
Endocrinology ANY of the following:
  • Low serum testosterone
  • Abnormalities in LH / FSH / prolactin levels
  • Testosterone replacement is being considered

Primary Care Management

Conservative / General Management

Before offering any therapeutic options:

  • Identify and treat curable causes of ED
  • Advice on lifestyle changes and risk factor modifications
  • Provide education and counselling to the patient +/- their partner

Pharmacological Management

1st line: PDE-5 inhibitor (sildenafil / tadalafil / vardenafil / avanafil)

  • MoA: PDE normally breaks down cGMP → prolonge cGMP-mediated smooth muscle relaxation in the corpora cavernosa
  • Typically taken intermittently (15-60 min before sexual activity), as needed
  • Tadalafil (long acting: up to 36 hours) may be prescribed once daily in specific circumstances

Key contraindications of PED-5 inhibitors:

  • Regular / intermittent use of nitrates (due to risk of hypotension)
  • Hypotension
  • Recent myocardial infarction / stroke
  • Unstable angina or angina occurring during sexual intercourse

Arrange follow-up 6–8 weeks after starting treatment

  • If initial treatment is ineffective:
    • Reassess for underlying causes and risk factors, and manage appropriately
    • Note that hypogonadism and a low testosterone level may result in a reduced response or non-response to PDE-5 inhibitors
  • Ensure it is taken correctly and advise on possible dose and drug regimen changes
  • Suggest a trial of at least two different PDE-5 inhibitors taken sequentially before being classed as a ‘non-responder’

Patients who fail to respond to the maximum dose of at least two different PDE-5 inhibitors should be referred to a specialist

Do not recommend the use of unlicensed herbal preparations or complementary medicines.

Secondary Care Management

Options include:

  • Alprostadil penile intracavernous injections
  • Vacuum erection assistance devices
  • Medicated urethral system for erection
  • Vascular surgery/angioplasty
  • Penile prostheses

References

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