The woman’s perception of her partner’s sexual function

Nale D1, Mitovic N2, Nale P1, Mitrinovic N3, Babic U4

Research Type

Clinical

Abstract Category

Female Sexual Dysfunction

Abstract 708
Open Discussion ePosters
Scientific Open Discussion Session 107
Friday 9th October 2026
10:40 - 10:45 (ePoster Station 5)
Exhibition Hall
Female Incontinence Sexual Dysfunction
1. Clinic of Urology, Belgrade, 2. Institute of pathophisiology, BelgradeClinic of Urologz Belgrade, 3. Mathematical Grammar School, Belgrade, Serbia., 4. Clinic of Urology
Presenter
Links

Abstract

Hypothesis / aims of study
The role of partnership in the sexual health of women with urinary incontinence is central and multidimensional. The partnership has a significant impact on psychological well-being, sexual function and treatment outcomes. The objective of our study was to investigate the role of the partner in sexual activity in incontinent women, using partner – related domain of validated questionnaire PISQ-12.
Study design, materials and methods
This study was clinical-epidemiological and cross-sectional. A consecutive sample of 660 female patients with different types of urinary incontinence attending the Clinic of urology were invited to participate in this study. The inclusion criteria were that patients must be: 18 years or older, sexually active within the past 6 months, able to read and write Serbian, not pregnant, and have no history of pelvic/gynecological surgery or radiation. All included patients were those having their first visit for urinary incontinence/POP and willingly volunteering to participate in the study. Patients who did not meet all of the inclusion criteria were excluded. In addition, women who were on hormonal replacement therapy for menopause, had a functional disability, and/or had psychotic disorders including schizophrenia were excluded from our study. The control group included 112 women without UI and/or POP. After patients completed the PISQ-12 questionnaire, they were examined by a physician who determined the type of their incontinence and any degree of POP via standardized assessment and POP-Q stage.
Results
Demographic and clinical characteristics of women with incontinence/POP and control are presented in Table 1. A significantly higher incidence of sexually active women in the control group was registered compared to incontinent women (p-value=0.000). Better sexual function was also registered in women without pelvic floor dysfunction, assessed with the total PISQ-12 questionnaire and partner – related domain of questionnaire PISQ-12 (Table 1.)	

Study group                  Control Group	p value
	     (n=660)
	     (n=112)
	
Age (years)
	58.4±11.0 (4)*	   49.8±8.9 (1)*	<0.001
BMI (kg/m2)
	 27.6±8.5 (19)*	   26.7±17.0 (1)*	0.389
Parity
	1.9±0.7 (8)*	    1.5±0.9 (1)*	<0.001
Education	(13)*	(1)*	
     Elementary (8 grades)	       12 (20%)	     17 (15%)	0.538
     High school (12 grades)	     361 (56%)	     66 (59%)	
     Further Education
	     158 (24%)	     28 (26%)	
Marital status			
     Married or in relationship	      489 (74%) (6)*	      94 (85%) (1)*	0.023
     Single, divorced or widow
	     165 (26%)	      17 (15%)	
Menopause	
	511 (78%) (8)*	      52 (47%) (1)*	<0.001
Sexually active	374 (57%) (2)*	   103 (92%)	<0.001
			
PISQ-12			
     Total	30.84±6.82	38.19±5.61	<0.001
    Behavioral-Emotive	9.71±2.89	11.40±3.21	<0.001
    Physical	13.46±4.41	18.46±2.79	<0.001
    Partner-Related	  7.72±1.84	  8.33±1.81	0.003
Interpretation of results
Sexual activity in women with urinary incontinence is not only an individual construct but includes a significant partner-related dimension, as demonstrated by validated instruments such as the PISQ-12.
Concluding message
The partner acts as either a protective factor or a risk factor in the sexual activity of incontinent women. Integrating the partner into assessment is essential for comprehensive care. The partner-related domain of PISQ-12 provides limited insight into the partner’s role, as it reflects only the woman’s perception of her partner’s sexual function, without assessing broader relational and psychosocial aspects.
References
  1. 't Hoen LA, Utomo E, Steensma AB, Blok BF, Korfage IJ. The Pelvic Organ Prolapse/Urinary Incontinence Sexual Questionnaire (PISQ-12): validation of the Dutch version. Int Urogynecol J. 2015 Sep;26(9):1293-303. doi: 10.1007/s00192-015-2692-y. Epub 2015 May 12. PMID: 25963057; PMCID: PMC4545192.
  2. Zhao Tian, Xiuqi Wang, Linru Fu, Zhe Du, Zhijing Sun, Impact of female stress urinary incontinence and related treatments on the sexual function of male partners: a systematic review and meta-analysis, The Journal of Sexual Medicine, Volume 20, Issue 8, August 2023, Pages 1069–1077, https://doi.org/10.1093/jsxmed/qdad070
  3. Nale D, Skoric V, Nale P, Babic U, Petrovic M, Radovic I, Markovic J, Soldatovic I. Validation of the Serbian version of the Pelvic Organ Prolapse/Urinary Incontinence/Sexual Questionnaire short form (PISQ-12). Int Urogynecol J. 2022 Nov;33(11):3177-3184. doi: 10.1007/s00192-022-05288-1. Epub 2022 Jul 12. PMID: 35821433.
Disclosures
Funding No source of funding or grant Clinical Trial Yes Public Registry No RCT Yes Subjects Human Ethics Committee The study was approved by Ethics Committee of the University Clinical Centre of Belgrade (No: 623/2). Helsinki Yes Informed Consent Yes AI Not at all
07/06/2026 09:03:31