Peer-influenced content. Sources you trust. No registration required. This is HCN.

Therapeutic Advances in Urology (TAU)The Causal Association Between Seven Drugs and Erectile Dysfunction: A Mendelian Randomization Study

ℹ️ Observational Association Only Evidence

Researchers applied two-sample Mendelian randomization to GWAS data from more than 220,000 individuals to evaluate genetically predicted causal associations between 40 drugs and erectile dysfunction. Six agents — two statins, an ACE inhibitor, two antidiabetics, and a beta-blocker — showed associations with ED risk after confounding SNP exclusions. The analysis is the first to use MR methodology across multiple drug exposures simultaneously for ED.


Clinical Considerations

  • Genetically predicted associations with ED were identified for simvastatin, atorvastatin, ramipril, metformin, gliclazide, and atenolol; aspirin did not reach significance (p=0.051) after SNP adjustment
  • Atenolol and metformin produced implausibly high odds ratios, which the authors attribute to possible weak instrument bias, low event counts, or rare variant influence so interpret with caution
  • Findings apply exclusively to a European population (n=223,805); generalizability to other ancestries remains unknown
  • Authors acknowledge ED risk in these patients may reflect pharmacodynamic effects, underlying comorbidities, or psychological factors rather than direct drug causation

Practice Applications

  • Recognize this as hypothesis-generating MR evidence. Genetically predicted associations require RCT validation before informing prescribing decisions or patient counseling.
  • Consider proactive ED screening conversations with male patients initiating or maintained on statins, ACE inhibitors, beta-blockers, or oral antidiabetics, independent of this study’s conclusions
  • Avoid attributing ED causally to specific agents in this list without ruling out disease burden, metabolic comorbidities, and psychological contributors
  • Monitor for RCT-level evidence as this MR signal may inform future trial design around ED as a secondary outcome in cardiovascular and metabolic drug studies
The Healthcare Communications Network is owned and operated by IQVIA Inc.

Click below to leave this site and continue to IQVIA’s Privacy Choices form