Evidence Library
Evidence Library
Studies on penile enhancement differ in materials, treatment volume, measurement methods, follow-up periods, and definitions of complications. Direct comparisons should therefore be interpreted cautiously. This library summarises each study alongside its limitations — it is not a ranking.
No studies match these filters.
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Am I normal? A systematic review and construction of nomograms for flaccid and erect penis length and circumference in up to 15,521 men Constructed nomograms of penile size. Mean flaccid length ~9.16 cm, stretched ~13.24 cm, erect ~13.12 cm; erect circumference ~11.66 cm. Read full summary
- Study design
- Systematic review
- Sample size
- Up to 15,521 men (17 studies)
- Intervention
- Standardised clinician measurement of penile dimensions
- Comparator
- None (descriptive nomograms)
- Follow-up
- Not applicable
- Main result
- Constructed nomograms of penile size. Mean flaccid length ~9.16 cm, stretched ~13.24 cm, erect ~13.12 cm; erect circumference ~11.66 cm.
- Reported adverse events
- Not applicable
- Authors’ conclusion
- Provides reference ranges that can reassure most men and inform counselling.
- Important limitation
- Pooled heterogeneous measurement methods; participants were not a random population sample.
- What this means for a patient
- Many men who seek enhancement already fall within the normal range. Knowing the reference data is a reasonable first step.
- Reviewed
- 2025-06-01 · doi.org/10.1111/bju.13010
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Position Paper: Management of Men Complaining of a Small Penis Despite an Actually Normal Size Recommends structured assessment and counselling first; considers lengthening surgery experimental and to be limited to research settings. Read full summary
- Study design
- Guideline or consensus
- Sample size
- Expert position paper
- Intervention
- Assessment and counselling framework
- Comparator
- Not applicable
- Follow-up
- Not applicable
- Main result
- Recommends structured assessment and counselling first; considers lengthening surgery experimental and to be limited to research settings.
- Reported adverse events
- Reviews risks of enhancement surgery
- Authors’ conclusion
- For men with normal anatomy, counselling should precede any procedure.
- Important limitation
- A consensus/expert opinion, not primary comparative data.
- What this means for a patient
- A responsible provider will assess expectations and body image before recommending a procedure.
- Reviewed
- 2025-06-01 · doi.org/10.1111/j.1743-6109.2012.02725.x
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A Critical Analysis of Penile Enhancement Procedures for Patients with Normal Penile Size: Surgical Techniques, Success, and Complications Reported gains are often modest and satisfaction inconsistent; complication rates are not negligible. Read full summary
- Study design
- Systematic review
- Sample size
- Literature review (1965–2008)
- Intervention
- Surgical and injectable enhancement techniques
- Comparator
- Across techniques
- Follow-up
- Varied across included studies
- Main result
- Reported gains are often modest and satisfaction inconsistent; complication rates are not negligible.
- Reported adverse events
- Scarring, deformity, sensory change, dissatisfaction
- Authors’ conclusion
- Enhancement in men with normal size is not well supported and carries real risks.
- Important limitation
- Heterogeneous, mostly low-quality primary studies.
- What this means for a patient
- Set expectations carefully and weigh the complication risk against a possibly modest benefit.
- Reviewed
- 2025-06-01 · doi.org/10.1016/j.eururo.2008.07.080
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Systematic Review of Surgical and Nonsurgical Interventions in Normal Men Complaining of Small Penis Size Evidence for treating small penis in normal men is scant and low-quality; structured counselling is advised, with extenders for those still seeking change. Read full summary
- Study design
- Systematic review
- Sample size
- Systematic review
- Intervention
- Enhancement and non-enhancement interventions
- Comparator
- Across interventions
- Follow-up
- Varied across included studies
- Main result
- Evidence for treating small penis in normal men is scant and low-quality; structured counselling is advised, with extenders for those still seeking change.
- Reported adverse events
- Surgical interventions carry higher complication risk
- Authors’ conclusion
- Counselling first; surgery is poorly supported by quality evidence.
- Important limitation
- Included studies were largely small and uncontrolled.
- What this means for a patient
- Non-surgical options and counselling are reasonable to consider before surgery.
- Reviewed
- 2025-06-01 · doi.org/10.1016/j.sxmr.2019.01.004
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Non-invasive and surgical penile enhancement interventions for aesthetic or therapeutic purposes: a systematic review Multiple methods can produce measurable change, but the overall evidence base is limited and standardisation is poor. Read full summary
- Study design
- Systematic review
- Sample size
- Systematic review
- Intervention
- Range of non-invasive and surgical enhancement methods
- Comparator
- Across methods
- Follow-up
- Varied across included studies
- Main result
- Multiple methods can produce measurable change, but the overall evidence base is limited and standardisation is poor.
- Reported adverse events
- Complication profiles differ by method
- Authors’ conclusion
- Method choice should weigh evidence maturity, reversibility and complication profile.
- Important limitation
- Pooled heterogeneous studies of variable quality.
- What this means for a patient
- No single method is established as best; the trade-offs matter more than the maximum size gain.
- Reviewed
- 2025-06-01 · doi.org/10.1111/bju.15145
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Penile girth enhancement procedures for aesthetic purposes Girth techniques can increase circumference short term, but durability and complication data (nodules, asymmetry, reabsorption) limit strong conclusions. Read full summary
- Study design
- Systematic review
- Sample size
- Narrative/critical review (to March 2021)
- Intervention
- Girth procedures: fillers, fat, grafts
- Comparator
- Across girth techniques
- Follow-up
- Varied across included studies
- Main result
- Girth techniques can increase circumference short term, but durability and complication data (nodules, asymmetry, reabsorption) limit strong conclusions.
- Reported adverse events
- Nodules, asymmetry, migration, reabsorption, contour irregularity
- Authors’ conclusion
- Girth enhancement remains an area of limited, low-certainty evidence.
- Important limitation
- Few controlled studies; short follow-up in most reports.
- What this means for a patient
- Ask specifically about how long results last and how complications would be corrected.
- Reviewed
- 2025-06-01 · doi.org/10.1038/s41443-021-00459-y
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The Effects of Penile Girth Enhancement using Injectable Hyaluronic Acid Gel, a Filler Reported a measurable increase in penile girth with generally favourable early patient satisfaction. Read full summary
- Study design
- Prospective cohort
- Sample size
- Single-arm clinical study
- Intervention
- Injectable hyaluronic acid gel for girth
- Comparator
- None (before/after)
- Follow-up
- Months
- Main result
- Reported a measurable increase in penile girth with generally favourable early patient satisfaction.
- Reported adverse events
- Local swelling; risk of nodules and unevenness
- Authors’ conclusion
- HA girth injection is feasible with short-term benefit in this cohort.
- Important limitation
- No control group; limited follow-up; single-centre.
- What this means for a patient
- Early results can look good; the key questions are durability and how nodules are handled.
- Reviewed
- 2025-06-01 · doi.org/10.1111/j.1743-6109.2010.01748.x
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Penile Suspensory Ligament Division for Penile Augmentation: Indications and Results Mean stretched-length gain ~1.3 ± 0.9 cm (range −1 to +3 cm); a spacer improved results, but gains often did not satisfy patients. Read full summary
- Study design
- Retrospective study
- Sample size
- 42 patients
- Intervention
- Suspensory ligament division (± silicone spacer)
- Comparator
- With vs without spacer
- Follow-up
- Post-operative assessment
- Main result
- Mean stretched-length gain ~1.3 ± 0.9 cm (range −1 to +3 cm); a spacer improved results, but gains often did not satisfy patients.
- Reported adverse events
- Some patients lost length; unrealistic expectations common
- Authors’ conclusion
- Ligament division may increase length, but usually not enough to satisfy the patient.
- Important limitation
- Retrospective, single-centre, mixed indications.
- What this means for a patient
- Expect a small flaccid-length change at most, and a real chance of dissatisfaction.
- Reviewed
- 2025-06-01 · doi.org/10.1016/j.eururo.2006.01.020
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A pilot phase-II prospective study to test the ‘efficacy’ and tolerability of a penile-extender device in the treatment of ‘short penis’ With consistent daily wear, modest increases in flaccid length were recorded over months. Read full summary
- Study design
- Prospective cohort
- Sample size
- Single-arm pilot
- Intervention
- Daily penile-extender (traction) use over 6 months
- Comparator
- None (before/after)
- Follow-up
- 6 months
- Main result
- With consistent daily wear, modest increases in flaccid length were recorded over months.
- Reported adverse events
- Generally tolerable; requires many hours of daily use
- Authors’ conclusion
- Traction can produce small measurable length change with high adherence.
- Important limitation
- Small, uncontrolled pilot; adherence demands are high.
- What this means for a patient
- Any gain requires months of consistent daily use, and the change is small.
- Reviewed
- 2025-06-01 · doi.org/10.1111/j.1464-410X.2008.08083.x
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Effect of Penile-Extender Device in Increasing Penile Size in Men with Shortened Penis: Preliminary Results Reported measurable length increase with sustained use, consistent with other traction studies. Read full summary
- Study design
- Prospective cohort
- Sample size
- Prospective clinical study
- Intervention
- Penile-extender device over an extended period
- Comparator
- None (before/after)
- Follow-up
- Months
- Main result
- Reported measurable length increase with sustained use, consistent with other traction studies.
- Reported adverse events
- Skin discomfort; adherence-dependent
- Authors’ conclusion
- Supports a modest role for traction with disciplined use.
- Important limitation
- Preliminary; small; no control arm.
- What this means for a patient
- Reinforces that traction is a slow, commitment-heavy option with modest returns.
- Reviewed
- 2025-06-01 · doi.org/10.1111/j.1743-6109.2009.01662.x
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Non-invasive methods of penile lengthening: fact or fiction? Traction has the most supportive (though limited) data; vacuum devices show little durable length effect. Read full summary
- Study design
- Systematic review
- Sample size
- Literature review
- Intervention
- Non-invasive lengthening (traction, vacuum)
- Comparator
- Across non-invasive methods
- Follow-up
- Varied across included studies
- Main result
- Traction has the most supportive (though limited) data; vacuum devices show little durable length effect.
- Reported adverse events
- Generally low-risk but demanding
- Authors’ conclusion
- Among non-invasive options, traction is the most evidence-supported for modest length change.
- Important limitation
- Underlying studies are few and heterogeneous.
- What this means for a patient
- If you try a non-invasive route, traction is the option with the most (still limited) support.
- Reviewed
- 2025-06-01 · doi.org/10.1111/j.1464-410X.2010.09647.x