Joint Terminology Report: Terminology Standardization for Female Bladder Pain Syndrome
other
OA: closed
public-domain-us
⚙
AI-generated deep summary
by claude@2026-06, 2026-06-11
· read from full text
ⓘ
This joint terminology report addresses female bladder pain syndrome (FBPS), previously termed interstitial cystitis/bladder pain syndrome, focusing on difficulties in diagnosis caused by variable presentation, lack of pathognomonic symptoms, and absence of sensitive diagnostic tests. It highlights major symptomatic overlap with other female pelvic pain conditions and notes frequent co-occurrence with other pain and functional somatic syndromes, emphasizing that inconsistent worldwide definitions have hindered progress in understanding and improving care. The American Urogynecologic Society and International Urogynecologic Association convened a writing group that, based on available data and clinical experience, reached consensus to adopt “FBPS” instead of “interstitial cystitis” to describe chronic symptoms (≥3 months) localized to the bladder and not attributable to other pathology. Relevance to endometriosis: the paper specifically cites symptomatic overlap with other pelvic conditions such as endometriosis, though its main focus is terminology standardization for FBPS.
Abstract
Female bladder pain syndrome (FBPS), previously known as interstitial cystitis/bladder pain syndrome, is a life-altering and morbid condition that occurs primarily in female patients and can be variable in presentation. Given the absence of pathognomonic symptoms and sensitive diagnostic tests, significant symptomatic overlap with numerous other pelvic conditions (such as pelvic floor tension myalgia or endometriosis) occurring in women makes diagnosis of FBPS challenging. The frequent co-occurrence of FBPS with other pain conditions and functional somatic syndromes further complicates diagnosis and management. The challenges have limited the progress made in understanding the pathophysiology of the condition and improving approaches to treatment and prevention. Improvement in standardization of the terminology used to describe this unique condition is needed to improve the accuracy of diagnosis and the clinical care for affected patients. Given the variability in presentation and the differing definitions for the condition world-wide, the American Urogynecologic Society and the International Urogynecologic Association convened a joint writing group to standardize terminology around common signs and symptoms of the condition and to clarify the diagnosis as it pertains to female patients with the condition. After careful consideration of a broad range of available data and clinical experiences, consensus opinion recommended adopting the term "FBPS" instead of the misleading "interstitial cystitis" to describe a chronic, intermittent condition of at least 3 months' duration affecting women involving symptoms of pain or discomfort localized to the bladder, often with bladder filling, which are not attributed to other pathology. This term will allow clinicians, researchers, and learners alike to standardize their understanding of FBPS.
Full text
1,891 characters
· extracted from
oa-doi-fallback
· click to expand
Female bladder pain syndrome (FBPS), previously known as interstitial cystitis/bladder pain syndrome, is a life-altering and morbid condition that occurs primarily in female patients and can be variable in presentation. Given the absence of pathognomonic symptoms and sensitive diagnostic tests, significant symptomatic overlap with numerous other pelvic conditions (such as pelvic floor tension myalgia or endometriosis) occurring in women makes diagnosis of FBPS challenging. The frequent co-occurrence of FBPS with other pain conditions and functional somatic syndromes further complicates diagnosis and management. The challenges have limited the progress made in understanding the pathophysiology of the condition and improving approaches to treatment and prevention. Improvement in standardization of the terminology used to describe this unique condition is needed to improve the accuracy of diagnosis and the clinical care for affected patients. Given the variability in presentation and the differing definitions for the condition world-wide, the American Urogynecologic Society and the International Urogynecologic Association convened a joint writing group to standardize terminology around common signs and symptoms of the condition and to clarify the diagnosis as it pertains to female patients with the condition. After careful consideration of a broad range of available data and clinical experiences, consensus opinion recommended adopting the term “FBPS” instead of the misleading “interstitial cystitis” to describe a chronic, intermittent condition of at least 3 months’ duration affecting women involving symptoms of pain or discomfort localized to the bladder, often with bladder filling, which are not attributed to other pathology. This term will allow clinicians, researchers, and learners alike to standardize their understanding of FBPS.
AUGS-IUGA Joint Publication
Text is read by the "Ask this paper" AI Q&A widget below.
Extraction quality varies by source — PMC NXML preserves structure
cleanly, OA-HTML may include some navigation residue, and OA-PDF can
have broken hyphenation. The publisher copy
(via DOI)
is the canonical version.
My notes (saved in your browser only)
⚙
Ask this paper
AI returns verbatim quotes from the full text
· source: oa-doi-fallback
ⓘ
Condition tags
chronic_pelvic_painendometriosisinterstitial_cystitis
MeSH descriptors
Cystitis, Interstitial
Cystitis, Interstitial
Cystitis, Interstitial
Cystitis, Interstitial
Cystitis, Interstitial
Cystitis, Interstitial
Cystitis, Interstitial
Cystitis, Interstitial
Cystitis, Interstitial
Cystitis, Interstitial
Cystitis, Interstitial
Cystitis, Interstitial
Cystitis, Interstitial
Cystitis, Interstitial
Cystitis, Interstitial
Cystitis, Interstitial
Cystitis, Interstitial
Cystitis, Interstitial
Cystitis, Interstitial
Cystitis, Interstitial
Citation neighborhood
(no data yet)
We don't have any in-corpus citations linked to this paper yet.
This is a recent paper (2025) — citers
typically take a year or two to land, and the OpenAlex reference
graph may still be filling in.
Source provenance
- europepmc
- last seen: 2026-06-14T06:08:20.186862+00:00
- pubmed
- last seen: 2026-06-14T06:05:29.434508+00:00
- unpaywall
- last seen: 2026-05-11T08:34:28.763810+00:00
License: public-domain-us
· commercial use OK
· attribution required
Courtesy of the U.S. National Library of Medicine