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Dive into the research topics where Raymond C. Rosen is active.

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Featured researches published by Raymond C. Rosen.


Clinical trials (London, England) | 2014

THE TESTOSTERONE TRIALS: THE DESIGN OF SEVEN COORDINATED TRIALS TO DETERMINE IF TESTOSTERONE TREATMENT BENEFITS ELDERLY MEN

Peter J. Snyder; Susan S. Ellenberg; Glenn R. Cunningham; Alvin M. Matsumoto; Shalender Bhasin; Elizabeth Barrett-Connor; Thomas M. Gill; John T. Farrar; David Cella; Raymond C. Rosen; Susan M. Resnick; Ronald S. Swerdloff; Jane A. Cauley; Denise Cifelli; Laura Fluharty; Marco Pahor; Kristine E. Ensrud; Cora E. Lewis; Mark E. Molitch; Jill P. Crandall; Christina Wang; Matthew J. Budoff; Nanette K. Wenger; rd Emile R Mohler; Diane E. Bild; Nakela L. Cook; Tony M. Keaveny; David L. Kopperdahl; David C. Lee; Ann V. Schwartz

Background The prevalence of low testosterone levels in men increases with age, as does the prevalence of decreased mobility, sexual function, self-perceived vitality, cognitive abilities, bone mineral density, and glucose tolerance, and of increased anemia and coronary artery disease. Similar changes occur in men who have low serum testosterone concentrations due to known pituitary or testicular disease, and testosterone treatment improves the abnormalities. Prior studies of the effect of testosterone treatment in elderly men, however, have produced equivocal results. Purpose To describe a coordinated set of clinical trials designed to avoid the pitfalls of prior studies and to determine definitively whether testosterone treatment of elderly men with low testosterone is efficacious in improving symptoms and objective measures of age-associated conditions. Methods We present the scientific and clinical rationale for the decisions made in the design of this set of trials. Results We designed The Testosterone Trials as a coordinated set of seven trials to determine if testosterone treatment of elderly men with low serum testosterone concentrations and symptoms and objective evidence of impaired mobility and/or diminished libido and/or reduced vitality would be efficacious in improving mobility (Physical Function Trial), sexual function (Sexual Function Trial), fatigue (Vitality Trial), cognitive function (Cognitive Function Trial), hemoglobin (Anemia Trial), bone density (Bone Trial), and coronary artery plaque volume (Cardiovascular Trial). The scientific advantages of this coordination were common eligibility criteria, common approaches to treatment and monitoring, and the ability to pool safety data. The logistical advantages were a single steering committee, data coordinating center and data and safety monitoring board, the same clinical trial sites, and the possibility of men participating in multiple trials. The major consideration in participant selection was setting the eligibility criterion for serum testosterone low enough to ensure that the men were unequivocally testosterone deficient, but not so low as to preclude sufficient enrollment or eventual generalizability of the results. The major considerations in choosing primary outcomes for each trial were identifying those of the highest clinical importance and identifying the minimum clinically important differences between treatment arms for sample size estimation. Potential limitations Setting the serum testosterone concentration sufficiently low to ensure that most men would be unequivocally testosterone deficient, as well as many other entry criteria, resulted in screening approximately 30 men in person to randomize one participant. Conclusion Designing The Testosterone Trials as a coordinated set of seven trials afforded many important scientific and logistical advantages but required an intensive recruitment and screening effort.


BJUI | 2009

Lower urinary tract symptoms and sexual health: the role of gender, lifestyle and medical comorbidities.

Raymond C. Rosen; Carol L. Link; Michael P. O’Leary; François Giuliano; Lalitha P. Aiyer; Patrick Mollon

To investigate the association between urological symptoms and self‐reported measures of sexual activity, desire and function in large representative samples of men and women in the Boston Area Community Health (BACH) survey.


Psychophysiology | 1978

The Measurement of Human Penile Tumescence

Raymond C. Rosen; Francis J. Keefe


Standard Practice in Sexual Medicine | 2008

Psychologic and Interpersonal Aspects and their Management

Stanley E. Althof; Raymond C. Rosen; Eusebio Rubio-Aurioles; Carolyn Earle; Marie Chevret‐Measson


Journal Of Urology. 163(4 Suppl.) | 2000

Daily and on-demand IC351 treatment of erectile dysfunction

François Giuliano; Hartmut Porst; Harin Padma Nathan; Jay Saoud; Kenneth Michael Ferguson; Steven Whitaker; William Ernest Pullman; Raymond C. Rosen


Archive | 2008

Assessment of male ejaculatory disorders

Raymond C. Rosen; Stanley E. Althof; Tara Symonds


Archive | 2013

Special Article Diagnosis and Treatment of Erectile Dysfunction for Reduction of Cardiovascular Risk

Ajay Nehra; Graham Jackson; Martin Miner; Kevin L. Billups; Arthur L. Burnett; Jacques Buvat; Culley C. Carson; Glenn R. Cunningham; Irwin Goldstein; André T. Guay; Geoff Hackett; Robert A. Kloner; John B. Kostis; Piero Montorsi; Melinda Ramsey; Raymond C. Rosen; Richard Sadovsky; Allen D. Seftel; Charalambos Vlachopoulos; Frederick C. W. Wu


Archive | 2012

ORIGINAL RESEARCH—MEN'S SEXUAL HEALTH Characterization of Hypoactive Sexual Desire Disorder (HSDD)

Leonard R. Derogatis; Raymond C. Rosen; Irwin Goldstein; Brian Werneburg; Joan Kempthorne-Rawson; Michael Sand


Archive | 2009

ORIGINAL RESEARCH—OUTCOMES ASSESSMENT Psychometric Validation of Gender Nonspecific Sexual Confidence and Sexual Relationship Scales in Men and Women

Lucy Abraham; Tara Symonds; Kathryn May; Stanley E. Althof; Ruth Hallam-Jones; Raymond C. Rosen


Archive | 2007

Rapid Communication Development and Validation of Four-Item Version of Male Sexual Health Questionnaire to Assess Ejaculatory Dysfunction

Raymond C. Rosen; Joseph A. Catania; Stanley E. Althof; Lance M. Pollack; Allen D. Seftel; David W. Coon

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Ajay Nehra

Rush University Medical Center

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Allen D. Seftel

United States Department of Veterans Affairs

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Ridwan Shabsigh

University Medical Center New Orleans

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Robert A. Kloner

Huntington Medical Research Institutes

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Tom F. Lue

University of Southern California

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