D172.63Genitourinary
History of Peyronie's disease
History of Peyronie's disease
What This Code Means
Receiving DQ code D172.63 means the DoDMERB physician reviewer determined that your medical history or exam findings related to history of peyronie's disease do not currently meet Department of Defense accession standards as defined in DoDI 6130.03.
This does not end your candidacy. Many conditions flagged under this code are waiverable. The next step is understanding the exact standard that applies to your situation and whether a waiver request is appropriate for your commissioning source.
Official Regulation Text
From DoDI 6130.03-V1, “Medical Standards for Military Service,” Change 6 (February 3, 2026)
Section 6.14.h — Male Genital System
“History of Peyronie's disease.”
Section 6.14.b — Male Genital System
“History of epispadias or hypospadias when accompanied by history of urinary tract infection, urethral stricture, urinary incontinence, symptomatic chordee, or genitourinary dysfunction unless currently asymptomatic and more than 18 months.”
Section 6.14.f — Male Genital System
“Current or history of recurrent orchitis or epididymitis.”
Section 6.14.g — Male Genital System
“History of penis amputation that has not been definitively surgically treated to establish a functional urinary tract.”
Section 6.14.i — Male Genital System
“History of genital infection or ulceration, including, but not limited to, herpes genitalis or condyloma acuminatum, if: (1) Current lesions are present; (2) Use of chronic suppressive therapy is needed; (3) There are three or more outbreaks per year; (4) Any outbreak in the last 12 months interfered with normal activities; or (5) After the initial outbreak, treatment included hospitalization or intravenous therapy.”
What You Can Do Next
- 1Don't panic — a DQ code is not a rejection. Many candidates receive disqualification codes and still earn appointments to Service Academies or ROTC scholarships. Focus on strengthening every other part of your application while addressing the medical issue.
- 2Understand the waiver process for your path. For Service Academy candidates, your admissions officer initiates the waiver request. For ROTC candidates, your detachment handles it. You cannot request a waiver directly from DoDMERB — it must come through your commissioning source.
- 3Be the strongest candidate possible. Waiver authorities consider the whole person — academics, athletics, leadership, and character. The more competitive your overall application, the more likely a waiver request will be initiated and approved.
- 4Gather the right medical documentation. Specialist evaluations, treatment records, and evidence that the condition is resolved or well-managed can make or break a waiver request. Knowing exactly what documentation to submit — and how to present it — matters.
- 5Get expert guidance early. LTC Kirkland (Ret.) has guided hundreds of Academy and ROTC candidates through the DoDMERB process, with medical review support from COL Cajigal (Ret.). A single consultation can clarify your waiver options and develop the right strategy for your specific situation.