Hosier Gregory W, Doiron R Christopher, Tolls Victoria, Nickel J Curtis
Department of Urology, Queen's University, Kingston, ON, Canada.
Can Urol Assoc J. 2018 Jun;12(6):E270-E275. doi: 10.5489/cuaj.4798. Epub 2018 Feb 23.
Urological chronic pelvic pain syndrome (UCPPS) in females is often attributed to the bladder (interstitial cystitis/ bladder pain syndrome), while UCPPS in males is often attributed to the prostate (chronic prostatitis/chronic pelvic pain syndrome). However, there is increasing awareness that bladder pain plays a role in both males and females and the degree of overlap of clinical characteristics in males and females with UCPPS is not well known. Our objective was to compare clinical phenotypes of females and males with UCPPS.
We conducted a retrospective analysis of prospectively collected data from a single-centre patient population presenting between 1998 and 2016 to our UCPPS clinic. Demographics, symptom scores, pain scales, retrospectively described clinical UPOINT (urinary, psychosocial, organ-specific, infection, neurogenic, and tenderness) scoring, and presence of comorbid medical conditions were compared between females and males using comparative analyses.
We identified 2007 subjects (1523 males, 484 females) with UCPPS. Females had increased prevalence of irritable bowel syndrome (25% vs. 11.2%), chronic fatigue syndrome (13.6% vs. 1.6%), fibromyalgia (16.9% vs. 1.6%), drug allergies (56.6% vs. 13.5%), diabetes (20.2% vs. 3.9%), depression (31% vs. 18.4%), and alcohol use (44.2% vs. 10.8%) compared to males with UCPPS (all p<0.001). In respect to UPOINT domains, females had a higher "total" (3.2 vs. 2.4), "urinary" (92.8% vs. 67.6%), "organ-specific" (90.1% vs. 51.4%), and "neurogenic" (44.7% vs. 30%) prevalence compared to males (all p<0.001).
Females with UCPPS have greater prevalence of systemic disorders/symptoms and worse urinary symptoms than males with UCPPS. These findings demonstrate that females and males with UCPPS have distinct and different clinical phenotypes.
女性泌尿生殖系统慢性盆腔疼痛综合征(UCPPS)常归因于膀胱(间质性膀胱炎/膀胱疼痛综合征),而男性UCPPS常归因于前列腺(慢性前列腺炎/慢性盆腔疼痛综合征)。然而,越来越多的人意识到膀胱疼痛在男性和女性中都起作用,并且患有UCPPS的男性和女性临床特征的重叠程度尚不清楚。我们的目的是比较患有UCPPS的女性和男性的临床表型。
我们对1998年至2016年间到我们的UCPPS诊所就诊的单中心患者群体中前瞻性收集的数据进行了回顾性分析。使用比较分析方法,比较了女性和男性之间的人口统计学、症状评分、疼痛量表、回顾性描述的临床UPOINT(泌尿、心理社会、器官特异性、感染、神经源性和压痛)评分以及合并症的存在情况。
我们确定了2007名患有UCPPS的受试者(1523名男性,484名女性)。与患有UCPPS的男性相比,女性患肠易激综合征(25%对11.2%)、慢性疲劳综合征(13.6%对1.6%)、纤维肌痛(16.9%对1.6%)、药物过敏(56.6%对13.5%)、糖尿病(20.2%对3.9%)、抑郁症(31%对18.4%)和饮酒(44.2%对10.8%)的患病率更高(所有p<0.001)。在UPOINT领域方面,与男性相比,女性的“总分”(3.2对2.4)、“泌尿”(92.8%对67.6%)、“器官特异性”(90.1%对51.4%)和“神经源性”(44.7%对30%)患病率更高(所有p<0.001)。
与患有UCPPS的男性相比,患有UCPPS的女性全身性疾病/症状的患病率更高,泌尿症状更严重。这些发现表明,患有UCPPS的女性和男性具有不同的临床表型。