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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2016 Apr 1.
Published in final edited form as: Inflamm Bowel Dis. 2015 Apr;21(4):923–938. doi: 10.1097/MIB.0000000000000257

Table I.

Summary of Studies Examining Sexual Functioning and Quality of Life in IBD Patients

Authors Year Total (N) Diagnosis (N) Surgery (N) Sexual Functioning Measure Sexual Functioning Results QoL Measure Quality of Life Results SF and QoL Associations
Bengtsson et al. 2011 108 UC Failed Pouch (36), Functioning Pouch (72) FSFI, IIEF No differences on any of the FSFI or IIEF domains were found b/t pts with pouch failure vs those with functioning pouch; Median summary scores for men and women in pouch failure group were below cut-offs for SD SF-36 Men/women with pouch failure scored lower on all SF-36 domains, compared to men/women with functioning pouch; only the social function domain for men was statistically significant
Cornish et al. 2012 109 IBD (54, RPC), UC no stoma or RPC (55) RPC FSFI No differences on all domains b/t patients who had RPC compared to those who did not SF-36 Overall physical health and bodily pain were significantly better among UC pts who did not have RPC; No significant differences were found on general health, overall mental health or social role domains
Da Silva et al. 2008 93 Benign (154), malignant disease (32) Pelvic (57), abdominal (36) FSFI Overall SF had significantly deteriorated 6-mo post-operatively, with partial recovery at 12-mo SF-36 For both groups, mental status improved significantly at 12-months, and physical status improved significantly at 6 months; patients undergoing abdominal surgery had faster physical status recovery MCS scores improved over time, with significant improvement ( p= 0.007) at 12 months. PCS scores demonstrated significant improvement at 6-months (but no significant improvement between 6 and 12 months). Better sexual functioning was also observed among women with higher MCS and PCS scores at 6 months.
Davies et al. 2008 59 UC (54), IC (1), FAP (4) IPAA FSFI, IIEF Male SF scores remained high post-operatively; Post-operatively, female SF improved significantly and female SD decreased significantly S-IBDQ Men and women demonstrated statistically significant improvement at 6- and 12-months post-operatively
El-Gazaaz et al. 2010 28 CD: healed (15), unhealed (14) Surgery for rectovaginal fistulas FSFI No significant differences on all domains between healed and unhealed patients SF-12, FIQL No significant differences on both measures between healed and non-healed pts
Hueting et al. 2004 111 IBD IPAA Self-created questions on SF SD=19.8%; Impotence or retrograde ejaculation=25.7%; Dyspareunia = 30.3% Self-created questions on QoL, and QoL rating 0–10 90% were satisfied with IPAA; 71% felt no general restrictions after IPAA; 78% felt QoL improved after IPAA
Kjaer et al. 2014 50 UC (44), FAP (4), other (2) L-IPAA (28), O-IPAA (22) FSFI, IIEF No significant differences on any domain between L-IPAA vs O-IPAA groups; Median scores on SF for men in both groups and women in L-IPAA were normal; Median scores for women in O-IPAA demonstrated SD S-IBDQ No significant differences were found between pts who had L-IPAA and those who had O-IPAA; Median scores in both groups indicate some impairment in QoL
Larson et al. 2008 125 UC and FAP L-IPAA (46), O-IPAA (79) FSFI, IIEF No significant differences on any domain between women in L-IPAA vs O-IPAA; Women in both grps demonstrated SD; Men in the L-IPAA group demonstrated significantly lower orgasmic function compared to men in the O-IPAA group SF-8 No significant differences were found between pts who had L-IPAA vs those who had O-IPAA; Mean scores on physical and mental health for both groups were within normal range
Muller at al. 2010 217 UC (85), CD (127), IC (5) N/A Self-created questions on SF 50% felt that IBD negatively affected their relationship status; 58% reported that frequency of sex was decreased by IBD; Female gender had a statistically significant negative impact on libido and frequency of sex Single Q: “Has IBD ever affected QoL?” 88.5% reported that QoL had been affected by IBD
Riss et al. 2012 168 CD (69), healthy controls (69) Surgery for anal fistulas FSFI, IIEF No significant differences on any domains between patients and controls; SD was high among female pts and female controls SF-12, IBDQ Median SF-12 physical health score was significantly lower among patients, compared to controls; Pts also demonstrated significnatly poorer IBDQ scores
Slors et al. 2000 76 UC (65), FAP (10), CC (1) Mesorectal Excision Self-created questions on SF Sexual activity, satisfaction and libido were better among males; incidental ED found in 7.5%; dyspareunia found in 41.7% QoL rating 0–10 Significant improvement in QoL for UC pts; No differences in QoL between men and women No correlation b/t QoL and sexual dysfunction
van Balkom et al. 2012 23 UC (16), FAP (10) RPC with IPAA FSFI, IIEF None of the men demonstrated sexual dysfunction and none reported impotence or retrograde ejaculation; 50% of women reported sexual dysfunction SF-36; GIQLI QoL scores were lower among men/women compared to normative data Male and female sexual function were highly correlated (r=0. 70) with QoL: PCS and MCS and GIQLI total scores although the correlation only trended toward significance (p=0.08).
Wang et al. 2011 66 UC (56), CD (10) IPAA (48), Permanent End ileostomy (18) FSFI, IIEF, SFQ SF-36, IBDQ Men/women with IPAA demonstrated significant improvement on SF-36 and IBDQ scales; Men/women with permanent end ileostomies did not demonstrate improvement on SF-36; Men demonstrated improvement on emotional health subscale of IBDQ
Yoshida et al. 2014 61 UC IPAA Sex life question from IBDQ; Self-created questions on SF 32% reported SD; no significant differences in SF between men and women; IBDQ-Japanese Social functions other than Sex life correlated with SF; significant difference in scores for Social functions other than Sex life between pts with poor and good sexual activity; scores for Bowel, Systemic and Emotional subscales were not correlated with SF

Notes:

IBD=Inflammatory Bowel Disease, SF=Sexual function, SD=Sexual dysfunction, UC=Ulcerative Colitis, CD=Crohn’s Disease, IC=Indeterminate Colitis, FAP=Familial adenomatous polyposis, CC=Chronic Constipation, ED=Erectile dysfunction, Pts=patients, FSFI=Female Sexual Function Index, IIEF=International Index of Erectile Function, SFQ=Sexual Function Questionnaire, FIQL=Fecal Incontinence Quality of Life Scale, L-IPAA=Laparoscopic Ileal Anal Anastomosis, O-IPAA=Open Ileal Anal Anastomosis, GIQLI=Gastrointestinal Quality of Life Index, BISF-W=Brief Index of Sexual Function in women, IBDQ=Inflammatory Bowel Disease Quality of Life Questionnaire, S-IBDQ=Short Form Inflammatory Bowel Disease Questionnaire; PCS=Physical Component Summary of SF-36; MCS =Mental Component Summary of SF-36