Practice Gaps: Peyronie's Disease

Where current care doesn’t always match current evidence — and what patients can do about it.

Pair-Reviewed · Concord Method

Here's what the published research doesn't yet answer.

  1. Gap 1: Volume-loss deformities are often missed

    65% of PD patients have hourglass, indentation, or distal-tapering deformities (Margolin 2018, n=128) — yet routine PD evaluation often doesn't formally assess for them. They're independently associated with axial instability (OR 3.5), psychological distress (OR 2.6), and decreased sexual activity (OR 2.7) — not just curvature surrogates. If your treatment plan doesn't address volume loss, your plan may be missing a significant component of your condition.

    Margolin 2018

    Read more →
  2. Gap 2: Verapamil at 3-month intervals has no published support

    Published verapamil protocols use weekly to biweekly intervals (Levine 2002, Favilla 2017). 3-month intervals appear in zero published studies — controlled or uncontrolled. If your urologist has you on a non-standard schedule for a treatment with no controlled curvature evidence, ask explicitly: 'What's the published basis for this interval?' 21% of US urologists currently use AUA-discouraged treatments (Brant 2023).

    Brant 2023; Favilla 2017

    Read more →
  3. Gap 3: No discussion of alternatives = no informed consent

    Only 60% of urologists perform thorough pre-treatment assessment including in-office curvature measurement. Fellowship-trained sexual medicine specialists do thorough evaluations 85% of the time vs 54% for non-fellowship-trained (P=.003). 81% of urologists treating PD have no fellowship training. If alternatives weren't discussed (CCH, HA, traction, surgery), informed consent didn't happen — regardless of paperwork signed.

    Brant 2023

    Read more →
  4. Gap 4: Refusing outside imaging delays care during the most critical window

    Outside imaging refusal is a documented systemic pattern — patient lock-in, billing capture, scheduling control. For PD specifically, every month of delay during active phase is a month of potential progression. If a Doppler is available elsewhere in 2 weeks but your urologist requires their own in 3 months, that adds 3 months to a timeline that's actively progressing.

    Expert analysis

    Read more →
  5. Gap 5: When the verbal summary doesn't match the written report

    Verbal clinical communication often diverges from formal documentation — a recognized quality concern across all medical specialties. For PD, treatment decisions should be based on documented findings, not verbal impressions. If something the doctor says doesn't match the report (e.g., 'reduced flow' verbally, but Doppler says all parameters normal), ask for clarification — one of them is wrong.

    Expert analysis

    Read more →
  6. Gap 6: Practice lags evidence — sometimes by a decade or more

    The time for landmark clinical evidence to change clinical practice is documented as substantial across multiple medical specialties. For PD: Favilla 2017 demonstrated zero verapamil curvature benefit in a double-blind RCT — yet verapamil remains widely prescribed in 2025. Brant 2023 (n=145) found 21% of US urologists currently use AUA-discouraged treatments. If your doctor's reference points are from before 2015, calibrate accordingly.

    Brant 2023; Favilla 2017

    Read more →
  7. Gap 7: 3-minute encounters can't deliver informed consent

    Meaningful informed consent requires understanding diagnosis, proposed treatment, alternatives, evidence for and against each, and risks. For PD — multiple options, phase-dependent selection, evidence-graded guidelines with cross-society disagreements — this is structurally impossible in a 3-minute encounter. If your PD encounter takes less than 10 minutes and doesn't include a discussion of alternatives, you may not be receiving informed-consent-grade care.

    Expert analysis

    Read more →
  8. Gap 8: Injectable without mechanical adjunct may be missing the mechanism

    Across CCH studies, mechanical adjunct (modeling, traction) appears necessary for curvature correction. A separate Phase IIb study (cited via secondary IMPRESS review literature) reported no difference between CCH and placebo in non-modeling arms. Studies with intensive multimodal mechanical adjunct (Capece 2018, n=135) report higher response rates than studies with standard modeling alone. If your doctor prescribes an injection without specifying a modeling/traction protocol, understanding the reasoning may be worth discussing.

    Capece 2018; IMPRESS Phase IIb

    Read more →
  9. How common are these gaps? Most are documented at clinically significant rates

    Volume-loss unassessed: 65% of patients have it (Margolin 2018), assessment rate unknown. AUA-discouraged treatments: 21% of US urologists currently use them (Brant 2023). No options discussion: 40% of urologists don't do thorough pre-treatment assessment. No fellowship training: 81% of urologists treating PD have no andrology fellowship. Survey response rate (Brant): 1.2% — non-respondent skew likely underestimates the gap. Most US data; community urology practices may have different gap profiles.

    Margolin 2018; Brant 2023

    Read more →

The Concord Method

Multiple independent AI agents work in coordinated teams. A research pair analyzes published medical literature and compares interpretations. A writing team translates findings into patient-accessible language. An editorial review verifies citation accuracy. A verification swarm traces every claim back to its PubMed source.

Cooperative AI agents working in pairs, using a notation system that forces uncertainty to be visible — they can’t hide what they don’t know from each other.