they fail to often for me to consider having one implanted , especially with the involved surgery . i can see their advantage, and if one failing was rare ,i could possibly go that route . but as it is ,it seems if you get past 3 years you're lucky .
i dont want to have do that whole thing more than once , and its just about guaranteed it will be at least twice or more, depending on a persons age .
Following up on questioning IPPs reliability
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ready2go
- Posts: 712
- Joined: Fri Aug 25, 2023 7:47 pm
Re: Following up on questioning IPPs reliability
American , retired in the philippines .
tactra malleable 13 mm ,in new delhi India . on april 2024
tactra malleable 13 mm ,in new delhi India . on april 2024
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ElbowRoom
- Posts: 646
- Joined: Mon Mar 17, 2025 1:58 pm
Re: Following up on questioning IPPs reliability
I'm sorry, no...my calculation is correct. The cited stat is that 30% of surgeries performed per year are revisions. NOT revisions of original surgeries PERFORMED that year. Those revision surgeries could have been for implants implanted the same year or 20 years previously. So you have to look at the total number of working implants in place across all years, and then divide by the number of revision surgeries performed to get the failure rate.
Since only Coloplast surgeries were cited, we can assume probably as many revisions were performed using AMS...so double the rate I quoted and you end up with 3-4% failures per year. Do you really think IPPs have a 20% failure rate in the same year they are implanted? That's ludicrous and there would be recalls on them immediately, no medical device could be FDA approved with that failure rate.
I'm not being biased I'm making reasonable assertions about the stats. If anything my numbers are conservative as I only cited 200,000 implants in use and only went back 20 years. There are probably more than that in place and some in operation longer than 20 years.
I'm not cheerleading anything, I'm looking objectively at the failure rates and I'm neither cheerleading nor "doon and gloom" about IPPs. I'm pre-op on my implant and believe me I would not serve my own purposes by barreling headlong into a surgery that would likely end up as a personal disaster. If I thought that was the case or the data supported that, I'd say so and cancel my scheduled surgery.
Since only Coloplast surgeries were cited, we can assume probably as many revisions were performed using AMS...so double the rate I quoted and you end up with 3-4% failures per year. Do you really think IPPs have a 20% failure rate in the same year they are implanted? That's ludicrous and there would be recalls on them immediately, no medical device could be FDA approved with that failure rate.
I'm not being biased I'm making reasonable assertions about the stats. If anything my numbers are conservative as I only cited 200,000 implants in use and only went back 20 years. There are probably more than that in place and some in operation longer than 20 years.
I'm not cheerleading anything, I'm looking objectively at the failure rates and I'm neither cheerleading nor "doon and gloom" about IPPs. I'm pre-op on my implant and believe me I would not serve my own purposes by barreling headlong into a surgery that would likely end up as a personal disaster. If I thought that was the case or the data supported that, I'd say so and cancel my scheduled surgery.
58yo Coloplast Titan 28cm Penoscrotal with Dr. Hakky 10/21/2025.
Pre-op erect measurements:
8.5"L and 6.5"C
Post-op: 8”L and 6”C at one week.
Pre-op erect measurements:
8.5"L and 6.5"C
Post-op: 8”L and 6”C at one week.
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LiverpoolLad
- Posts: 60
- Joined: Sun Oct 20, 2024 5:51 pm
Re: Following up on questioning IPPs reliability
ElbowRoom wrote:I'm sorry, no...my calculation is correct. The cited stat is that 30% of surgeries performed per year are revisions. NOT revisions of original surgeries PERFORMED that year. Those revision surgeries could have been for implants implanted the same year or 20 years previously. So you have to look at the total number of working implants in place across all years, and then divide by the number of revision surgeries performed to get the failure rate.
Since only Coloplast surgeries were cited, we can assume probably as many revisions were performed using AMS...so double the rate I quoted and you end up with 3-4% failures per year. Do you really think IPPs have a 20% failure rate in the same year they are implanted? That's ludicrous and there would be recalls on them immediately, no medical device could be FDA approved with that failure rate.
I'm not being biased I'm making reasonable assertions about the stats. If anything my numbers are conservative as I only cited 200,000 implants in use and only went back 20 years. There are probably more than that in place and some in operation longer than 20 years.
I'm not cheerleading anything, I'm looking objectively at the failure rates and I'm neither cheerleading nor "doon and gloom" about IPPs. I'm pre-op on my implant and believe me I would not serve my own purposes by barreling headlong into a surgery that would likely end up as a personal disaster. If I thought that was the case or the data supported that, I'd say so and cancel my scheduled surgery.
This^^
Where is the implant rep when you need him? I’m not an implant cheerleader but for there to be a revision rate that high for implants inserted in that same year doesn’t make sense tooyoung..
28 years old.
Currently trying injections - may be a neurogenic cause of ED.
Currently trying injections - may be a neurogenic cause of ED.
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duke_cicero
- Posts: 413
- Joined: Tue May 28, 2024 2:58 pm
Re: Following up on questioning IPPs reliability
ElbowRoom wrote:I'm sorry, no...my calculation is correct. The cited stat is that 30% of surgeries performed per year are revisions. NOT revisions of original surgeries PERFORMED that year. Those revision surgeries could have been for implants implanted the same year or 20 years previously. So you have to look at the total number of working implants in place across all years, and then divide by the number of revision surgeries performed to get the failure rate.
Since only Coloplast surgeries were cited, we can assume probably as many revisions were performed using AMS...so double the rate I quoted and you end up with 3-4% failures per year. Do you really think IPPs have a 20% failure rate in the same year they are implanted? That's ludicrous and there would be recalls on them immediately, no medical device could be FDA approved with that failure rate.
I'm not being biased I'm making reasonable assertions about the stats. If anything my numbers are conservative as I only cited 200,000 implants in use and only went back 20 years. There are probably more than that in place and some in operation longer than 20 years.
I'm not cheerleading anything, I'm looking objectively at the failure rates and I'm neither cheerleading nor "doon and gloom" about IPPs. I'm pre-op on my implant and believe me I would not serve my own purposes by barreling headlong into a surgery that would likely end up as a personal disaster. If I thought that was the case or the data supported that, I'd say so and cancel my scheduled surgery.
This is correct.
Born 1990. ED since age 20 after a bicycle accident. Coloplast Genesis malleable implanted December 2024 by the great Dr. Laurence Levine in Chicago.
· December 2024 implant journal
· June 2025 update
· December 2024 implant journal
· June 2025 update
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Courage
- Posts: 201
- Joined: Thu Oct 26, 2023 8:51 pm
Re: Following up on questioning IPPs reliability
Short of a long range tracking study of a meaningful number of young implantees who use the device to failure, you're not going to get at anything useful about reliability.
Middle-aged SGM with lifelong ED. AMS 700 CX 21cm + 3.5cm RTEs implanted January 2025 and explanted due to infection February 2025, with salvage. Revision to Coloplast Titan 24cm + 1cm RTE July 2025.
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Guvna98
- Posts: 22
- Joined: Mon Mar 17, 2025 3:14 pm
Re: Following up on questioning IPPs reliability
There are much better statistical analyses available like this one:
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/a ... 9522002680
It answers my question of how likely is it that my IPP will still be working in 5 years? 7 years? I have no idea what the 30% figure means or how I’d use it to predict the likely useful life of my device.
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/a ... 9522002680
It answers my question of how likely is it that my IPP will still be working in 5 years? 7 years? I have no idea what the 30% figure means or how I’d use it to predict the likely useful life of my device.
RP 2012, fought ED with viagra and cialis for years then switched to trimix for 3 years. Then scar tissue settled in. Implanted with AMX700 CX, 18+1, MS pump, Sept 24, 2025. Dr Darshan Patel, UCSD.
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easymoney
- Posts: 894
- Joined: Tue May 09, 2023 10:28 am
- Location: West Coast Fl.
Re: Following up on questioning IPPs reliability
Being implanted with a Rigicon ..and having to have it replaced a year later due to undersizing .. I wonder what the numbers are for MPP's not for failure since few do ..but for being undersized? ... When i went in to have mine replaced ..across the way I overheard a conversation .. another man ..same dr. was in there fore a revision dues to undersizing.
Rigicon since 6-2023 happy to share my experience and do show and tell
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Wooody
- Posts: 182
- Joined: Mon Jan 27, 2025 3:04 pm
- Location: Bay Area, CA
Re: Following up on questioning IPPs reliability
Courage wrote:Short of a long range tracking study of a meaningful number of young implantees who use the device to failure, you're not going to get at anything useful about reliability.
Agreed. Both the Coloplast 30% stat and the monthly revisions reports that keep getting thrown around as some proof that IPP's are unreliable are missing vital data points. How many of those revisions were not in fact device failures but the result of infections, under or over sizing errors, erosion, underfillment of reservoirs, etc etc? How old was each original implant? Maybe they were all over 10 years, 15 years? Maybe they were all under 5 years.. who knows?
Titan Classic 22cm + 1cm RTEs - 2/25 - Dr Karpman, Bay Area CA
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Courage
- Posts: 201
- Joined: Thu Oct 26, 2023 8:51 pm
Re: Following up on questioning IPPs reliability
Wooody wrote:Agreed. Both the Coloplast 30% stat and the monthly revisions reports that keep getting thrown around as some proof that IPP's are unreliable are missing vital data points. How many of those revisions were not in fact device failures but the result of infections, under or over sizing errors, erosion, underfillment of reservoirs, etc etc? How old was each original implant? Maybe they were all over 10 years, 15 years? Maybe they were all under 5 years.. who knows?
There's that. More importantly, most implants are put in old men with compromised health. If the patient predeceases the implant--ie dies before it stops functioning--those can't be properly accounted for in any meaningful way.
Respectfully, this discussion is nonscientific and isn't going to get better.
Middle-aged SGM with lifelong ED. AMS 700 CX 21cm + 3.5cm RTEs implanted January 2025 and explanted due to infection February 2025, with salvage. Revision to Coloplast Titan 24cm + 1cm RTE July 2025.
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LiverpoolLad
- Posts: 60
- Joined: Sun Oct 20, 2024 5:51 pm
Re: Following up on questioning IPPs reliability
tooyoung wrote:LiverpoolLad wrote:ElbowRoom wrote:I'm sorry, no...my calculation is correct. The cited stat is that 30% of surgeries performed per year are revisions. NOT revisions of original surgeries PERFORMED that year. Those revision surgeries could have been for implants implanted the same year or 20 years previously. So you have to look at the total number of working implants in place across all years, and then divide by the number of revision surgeries performed to get the failure rate.
Since only Coloplast surgeries were cited, we can assume probably as many revisions were performed using AMS...so double the rate I quoted and you end up with 3-4% failures per year. Do you really think IPPs have a 20% failure rate in the same year they are implanted? That's ludicrous and there would be recalls on them immediately, no medical device could be FDA approved with that failure rate.
I'm not being biased I'm making reasonable assertions about the stats. If anything my numbers are conservative as I only cited 200,000 implants in use and only went back 20 years. There are probably more than that in place and some in operation longer than 20 years.
I'm not cheerleading anything, I'm looking objectively at the failure rates and I'm neither cheerleading nor "doon and gloom" about IPPs. I'm pre-op on my implant and believe me I would not serve my own purposes by barreling headlong into a surgery that would likely end up as a personal disaster. If I thought that was the case or the data supported that, I'd say so and cancel my scheduled surgery.
This^^
Where is the implant rep when you need him? I’m not an implant cheerleader but for there to be a revision rate that high for implants inserted in that same year doesn’t make sense tooyoung..
You have MAUDE numbers lasthope publish monthly...it's about ~350 failures per month...given that 20-25k implants are installed anually in the U.S (keep in mind this is inclusive of mpps and that this number is published by companies and affiliated surgeons)...the ratio of failure (old or new implants) vs new implantation (revision + virgin cases) is 4.2k:22.5k is approx 0.2 which is 20% yearly failure.
It's just that the desperate like ourselves find it better to burry our heads in the sand for our mental wellbeing but that doesn't change the reality.
Do you understand that the 20-30% revisions you talk about, will be based on all implants not directly from the 20-25k figure you’re talking about. I understand this is added to the overall figure by nature, however basing the percentage from the 20-25k figure isn’t the way to work it out. There’s far more to it as ElbowRoom has said.
Anyway when are you going to stop yapping and get an implant? I suspect you’ll be one of the guys to find something to complain about anyway due to how you are interacting with others on this site.
28 years old.
Currently trying injections - may be a neurogenic cause of ED.
Currently trying injections - may be a neurogenic cause of ED.
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