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Some cancer treatments can affect your ability to ejaculate and have an orgasm. This doesn’t have to decrease the pleasure you feel during sexual activity, but it can affect your ability to father a child.
Learn more about how you might be affected and the options for managing or treating these problems.
Male orgasm (climax) is the peak of sexual excitement when pleasure is highest. Male orgasm happens in two stages: emission and ejaculation.
Emission is when semen (the fluid that comes out of your penis when you ejaculate) is deposited near the top of your urethra. A small valve at the top of the urethra shuts to keep the semen from going into the bladder.
Ejaculation is the release of semen from the penis during sexual activity. The fluid released includes both sperm and other fluids.
The nerves needed for emission and ejaculation are different. You can have an orgasm without ejaculating, or you can feel pleasure and ejaculate without having an orgasm.
Problems with ejaculation can happen if:
Problems with ejaculation can affect orgasm. As you age, it’s normal to see a mild decrease in the intensity of your orgasms. But this decrease can be more severe in men whose cancer treatments interfere with ejaculation.
The information below describes common sexual problems faced by adult men (or people with male reproductive organs*) after certain types of cancer treatment. You might have problems or needs that aren’t addressed here. Your cancer care team can help you manage your specific situation.
*To learn more about the gender terms used here, and how to start the conversation with your cancer care team about gender identity and sexual orientation, see Gender Identity, Sexual Orientation, and Cancer Treatment.
These cancer treatments can sometimes affect ejaculation:
Cancer surgery can affect ejaculation in different ways.
Many men are still able to have an orgasm after cancer surgery . But for some men, these might be dry orgasms (no fluid comes out of your penis when you ejaculate). The testicles still make sperm cells, but your body simply reabsorbs them. This is not harmful.
Dry orgasm can happen if:
Even without semen, you are likely to feel pleasure during an orgasm. Over time, many men adjust to having an orgasm without semen. Some men say the orgasm doesn’t feel as strong, while others report the orgasm is stronger and feels more pleasurable.
Retrograde ejaculation can also cause dry orgasm. This is when semen goes “backward” into your body instead of coming out through your penis.
With retrograde ejaculation, semen shoots back into your bladder rather than out through your penis. This happens when the valve between your bladder and urethra stays open. This valve normally shuts tightly during ejaculation.
Retrograde ejaculation isn’t painful or harmful, but when you urinate after this type of orgasm, your urine might look cloudy because your semen has mixed with your urine.
A transurethral resection of the prostate (TURP) is an example of an operation that most often causes retrograde ejaculation because it damages the bladder valve. This surgery cores out your prostate using a special scope. The scope passes through your urethra to reach your prostate.
Cancer surgery might also damage the nerves that control emission (when sperm and fluid mix to make semen).
These nerves come from your spine. They are separate from the nerves around your prostate that control your erections, so even when you lose your ability to make semen, you may still be able to have erections and orgasm, and experience pleasure.
Some surgeries for colon and rectal cancer can damage the nerves that control emission, because these nerves run close to the lower colon and rectum. This includes:
If you have testicular cancer, you may need to have a retroperitoneal lymph node dissection (RPLND).
This surgery removes lymph nodes in the back of your abdomen (belly), and it might damage some of the nerves that control emission and ejaculation. Damage to these nerves can sometimes be prevented if a nerve-sparing approach is used by a surgeon who has experience with this procedure.
Some men leak urine during ejaculation after they’ve had surgery for prostate cancer. (This is called climacturia.) It’s fairly common, but it might not even be noticeable to you or your partner. The amount of urine varies widely — anywhere from a few drops to more than 2 tablespoons.
Urine leakage might be more common in men who also have stress incontinence. This is when urine leaks when a person coughs, laughs, sneezes, or exercises.
Urine doesn’t harm a sexual partner, though it may be annoying during sex. The leakage tends to get better over time, and condoms and constriction bands can help. Constriction bands are tightened at the base of your erect penis. The band squeezes your urethra to keep urine from leaking out.
If you or your partner is bothered by climacturia, ask your health care team what can be done about it.
If you want to father a child in the future, ask your cancer care team how treatment might affect your fertility. If possible, have this conversation before you start treatment.
If there is a chance treatment might affect your fertility, sperm banking (collecting and preserving sperm) can be a good option.
There are things that can be done to help manage your ejaculation and orgasm problems.
What it is: Dry orgasm is when you no longer have fluid coming out of your penis when you ejaculate.
How it’s treated or managed: It can take a while to adjust to having dry orgasms, but they don’t need to be treated. Most men who have dry orgasms after cancer treatment still feel pleasure with orgasm, although some men report they have less sensation.
What it is: You might notice your orgasms are weaker or last a shorter time than before your cancer treatment. And as you age, the muscles that contract at climax are no longer as strong.
More severe weakening of orgasm often goes along with erection problems. In these cases, treating the erection problem may not improve your orgasm. But orgasms are possible without an erection or full erection.
How it’s treated or managed: A sex therapist can teach you techniques that help you have an erection.
What it is: Painful orgasm may also be a side effect of surgery or radiation therapy. This is usually caused by irritation or changes to your genitals.
How it’s treated or managed: If this happens, taking medication to manage the pain or seeing a sex therapist may be helpful.
What it is: Some men who have surgery for prostate cancer develop leakage of urine during orgasm (climacturia). The urine doesn’t harm a sexual partner, but some people are bothered by it.
How it’s treated or managed: Treatment usually starts with instructions to empty your bladder before sex and use a condom to catch any urine that leaks. Pelvic floor muscle exercises may also be helpful. Some men also find that an adjustable penile loop or constriction band can squeeze the urethra to keep urine from leaking.
Other procedures may be possible, so check with your urologist or cancer care team to learn more about your options.
What it is: Premature ejaculation means reaching orgasm too quickly. If you have erection problems, you may also lose your ability to delay orgasm. Premature ejaculation is a very common problem, even for healthy men.
Treatment may include:
Talk to your health care team about what kind of help might be right for you.
Developed by the P站视频 medical and editorial content team with medical review and contribution by the American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO).
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Last Revised: April 15, 2025
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