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Comparative Study
. 2018 Apr;25(2):9250-9254.

Improving the utility of clinical phenotyping in interstitial cystitis/painful bladder syndrome: from UPOINT to INPUT

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  • PMID: 29680002
Comparative Study

Improving the utility of clinical phenotyping in interstitial cystitis/painful bladder syndrome: from UPOINT to INPUT

Alice Crane et al. Can J Urol. 2018 Apr.

Abstract

Introduction: The phenotyping system UPOINT has proven effective in classifying patients with Urologic Pelvic Pain Syndromes in a clinically meaningful way and to guide therapy. While highly successful in men with chronic pelvic pain syndrome (CPPS), UPOINT is more limited in patients with interstitial cystitis/painful bladder syndrome (IC/PBS) since by definition all patients have the urinary and organ specific phenotype. Furthermore, AUA guidelines recommend a sequential tiered approach to therapy rather than the multimodal UPOINT scheme. We sought to modify UPOINT to be more practical and efficacious for IC/PBS.

Materials and methods: We developed a new phenotype by removing the urinary and organ specific domains from UPOINT and adding a Hunner's ulcers (U) domain, since these patients benefit from phenotype specific therapies (fulguration, cyclosporine). This yields 'INPUT': infection, neurologic/systemic, psychosocial, ulcers and tenderness of muscles. We applied this system retrospectively to our previously validated upointmd.com IC/PBS database. Symptoms were measured by the Genitourinary Pain Index (GUPI) (valid for men and women). The database was searched for patients with complete data to assess the INPUT domains and include GUPI. Men were included if they reported pain relieved by voiding and/or presence of Hunner's ulcers. Groups were compared with ANOVA, Mann-Whitney, t test or chi squared when appropriate and correlated with Spearman r.

Results: There were 239 patients, 154 female (64%) with age range 18-79 (mean 41.8). Incidence of domains was infection 11%, neurologic/systemic 51%, psychosocial 81%, ulcers 18% and tenderness 85%. Mean total domains was 2.46 (range 0-5) and 65% had 2 or 3 positive domains while only 5% had none. There was a stepwise increase in GUPI score with increasing number of positive INPUT domains (ANOVA for differences between groups p < 0.0001. Correlation by Spearman r = 0.355 p < 0.0001). Presence of Hunner's ulcers increased mean symptom score (25.7 versus 29.7, p = 0.004) and indeed each of the domains significantly increased total GUPI score except for Infection.

Conclusions: The INPUT phenotype in IC/PBS appears to replicate the validity and potential clinical utility of UPOINT in CPPS. Patients have a diversity of phenotypes and more positive domains correlate with more severe symptoms. Since 95% of patients have at least 1 positive domain it may benefit patients to receive multimodal therapy up front for these extra domains (eg. pelvic floor physical therapy, fulguration of ulcers) rather than relying on a sequential tiered approach.

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