What is the optimal treatment for phimosis?
A wide body of evidence shows that most boys can be treated successfully with steroid cream, and that circumcision is required only infrequently.6-9 Unfortunately, almost all of these studies lack the distinction between pathological phimosis, as defined by Rickwood et al,1 and other foreskins that are non-retractable either as a result of preputial adhesions or because they are physiologically non-retractable. However, clinical experience suggests that most cases of pathological phimosis can be successfully treated with steroid cream, provided the steroid cream is applied to the partly retracted prepuce three times daily. After 4–6 weeks the prepuce should be retracted at the time of bathing and after voiding.10 It also appears that even balanitis xerotica obliterans can be successfully treated without circumcision,11 particularly if steroid treatment is supplemented with the minor operation of preputioplasty, in which the distal end of the prepuce is widened.12 Unfortunately, because