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. 2024 Jul 3;73:102695. doi: 10.1016/j.eclinm.2024.102695

Table 5.

The key findings in prevalence of sexual dysfunction of CCSs.

References Sample Assessment tools Key findings
41 Cross-sectional study of 66 male CCSs a self-administered questionnaire of six questions
  • 30.3% reported one or more sexual problems.

37 Cross-sectional study of 599 young adult CCSs the MOS Sexual Functioning scale
  • 42.7% reported at least one problematic symptom (52% of females and 32% of males), which were classified as sexual dysfunction.

7 Large population-based cross-sectional of 2546 young adult CCSs the PROMIS Sexual Function and Satisfaction Measure
  • 57% females and 35% males reported dysfunction in at least one domain.

  • 22% females and 13% males reported dysfunction in at least two domains.

23 Cohort study of 291 CCSs the Swed-QUAL sexual functioning measure
  • 29% were sexual dysfunction cases (applied the classification criteria of reporting 2 items).

  • 37.3% in males and 19.9% in females.

28, 9 Cohort study of 1441 males; cross-sectional of 291 males IIEF
  • 12.3% and 29.0% of males suffering from erectile dysfunction respectively.

10 Cohort study of 712 females SFQ
  • classified survivors with scores <10th percentile of controls as sexual dysfunction.

  • 19.9% of females experienced sexual dysfunction.

44 Cross-sectional study of 200 CCSs the MOS Sexual Functioning scale
  • 24.0% experienced sexual dysfunction (defined as having at least one sexual problem).

29 Cross-sectional study of 57 CCSs IIEF-5, FSFI
  • erectile dysfunction was 25.0% in males.

  • sexual issues among females were 52.4%.

Note: MOS, medical outcomes study; PROMIS, Patient-Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System; IIEF, International Index of Erectile Function; SFQ, Sexual Functioning Questionnaires; FSFI, Female Sexual Function Index.