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Title: Do food and dose timing affect the efficacy of sildenafil? A randomized placebo-controlled study. Author: Zinner N. Journal: J Sex Med; 2007 Jan; 4(1):137-144. PubMed ID: 17233779. Abstract: INTRODUCTION: Sildenafil citrate has been used worldwide by men with erectile dysfunction. The prescribing information for sildenafil suggests ingestion 1 hour before sexual activity and also notes reduced maximum plasma concentration and delayed time to maximum concentration following ingestion with a high-fat meal. The clinical impact of coingestion of food and these factors has never been evaluated. AIM: To determine, using a naturalistic study design, whether sildenafil taken 1 hour before or during a meal compared with usual ingestion 30-60 minutes before sexual activity affects efficacy or patient satisfaction. METHODS: After a 1-2-week washout, 48 men (29-79 years old), currently satisfied with sildenafil, followed each of four regimens: (A) sildenafil 1 hour before a meal and placebo 30-60 minutes before planned coitus vs. (B) placebo 1 hour before a meal and sildenafil 30-60 minutes before coitus; and (C) sildenafil during a meal and placebo 30-60 minutes before coitus vs. (D) placebo during a meal and sildenafil 30-60 minutes before coitus. Subjects were not instructed to change their regular dietary habits during the course of the study. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Change from baseline in the International Index of Erectile Function (IIEF) Erectile Function (EF) domain score, responses to Sexual Encounter Profile (SEP) questions 2 (erection sufficient for penetration) and 3 (erection sufficient to complete intercourse), and measures of patient preference and satisfaction. RESULTS: Mean changes in IIEF-EF domain scores were 11.4 for regimens A and B and 11.2 for C and D. Positive SEP2 responses were recorded for 93.9% and 91.8% of intercourse attempts in A and B and 91.4% and 92.6% in C and D. Corresponding results for SEP3 were 84.7% and 85.9%, and 83.4% and 87.5%, respectively. There were no significant differences between pairs of treatments on satisfaction. The time between sildenafil ingestion and intercourse attempt (0-0.5 to >10 hours) had no significant effect on responses to SEP2, but decreased responses to SEP3 from a maximum of 92.8% at 1.5-2 hours to 81.6% at more than 10 hours (P = 0.003). CONCLUSIONS: No significant loss of efficacy occurs when sildenafil is taken shortly before or with a meal. The duration of action for sildenafil may exceed 10 hours.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]