H Henry Lai1, Craig Newcomb2, Steve Harte3, Dina Appleby2, A Lenore Ackerman4, Jennifer T Anger4, J Curtis Nickel5, Priyanka Gupta6, Larissa V Rodriguez7, J Richard Landis2, J Quentin Clemens6. 1. Departments of Surgery (Urology) and Anesthesiology, Washington University School of Medicine, St Louis, Missouri, USA. 2. Department of Biostatistics, Epidemiology and Informatics, University of Pennsylvania Perelman School of Medicine, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA. 3. Departments of Anesthesiology and Internal Medicine-Rheumatology, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan, USA. 4. Department of Urology, Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, Los Angeles, California, USA. 5. Department of Urology, Queen's University, Kingston, Ontario, Canada. 6. Department of Urology, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan, USA. 7. Departments of Urology, and Obstetrics and Gynecology, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, California, USA.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To use the phenotyping data from the MAPP-II Symptom Patterns Study (SPS) to compare the systemic features between urologic chronic pelvic pain syndrome (UCPPS) with Hunner lesion (HL) versus those without HL. METHODS: We performed chart review on 385 women and 193 men with UCPPS who enrolled in the MAPP-II SPS. 223 had cystoscopy and documentation of HL status. Among them, 12.5% had HL and 87.5% did not. RESULTS: UCPPS participants with HL were older, had increased nocturia, higher Interstitial Cystitis Symptom and Problem Indexes, and were more likely to report "painful urgency" compared with those without HL. On the other hand, UCPPS without HL reported more intense nonurologic pain, greater distribution of pain outside the pelvis, greater numbers of comorbid chronic overlapping pain conditions, higher fibromyalgia-like symptoms, and greater pain centralization, and were more likely to have migraine headache than those with HL. UCPPS without HL also had higher anxiety, perceived stress, and pain catastrophizing than those with HL. There were no differences in sex distribution, UCPPS symptom duration, intensity of urologic pain, distribution of genital pain, pelvic floor tenderness on pelvic examination, quality of life, depression, pain characteristics (nociceptive pain vs. neuropathic pain), mechanical hypersensitivity in the suprapubic area during quantitative sensory testing, and 3-year longitudinal pain outcome and urinary outcome between the two groups. CONCLUSIONS: UCPPS with HL displayed more bladder-centric symptom profiles, while UCPPS without HL displayed symptoms suggesting a more systemic pain syndrome. The MAPP-II SPS phenotyping data showed that Hunner lesion is a distinct phenotype from non-Hunner lesion.
OBJECTIVE: To use the phenotyping data from the MAPP-II Symptom Patterns Study (SPS) to compare the systemic features between urologic chronic pelvic pain syndrome (UCPPS) with Hunner lesion (HL) versus those without HL. METHODS: We performed chart review on 385 women and 193 men with UCPPS who enrolled in the MAPP-II SPS. 223 had cystoscopy and documentation of HL status. Among them, 12.5% had HL and 87.5% did not. RESULTS: UCPPS participants with HL were older, had increased nocturia, higher Interstitial Cystitis Symptom and Problem Indexes, and were more likely to report "painful urgency" compared with those without HL. On the other hand, UCPPS without HL reported more intense nonurologic pain, greater distribution of pain outside the pelvis, greater numbers of comorbid chronic overlapping pain conditions, higher fibromyalgia-like symptoms, and greater pain centralization, and were more likely to have migraine headache than those with HL. UCPPS without HL also had higher anxiety, perceived stress, and pain catastrophizing than those with HL. There were no differences in sex distribution, UCPPS symptom duration, intensity of urologic pain, distribution of genital pain, pelvic floor tenderness on pelvic examination, quality of life, depression, pain characteristics (nociceptive pain vs. neuropathic pain), mechanical hypersensitivity in the suprapubic area during quantitative sensory testing, and 3-year longitudinal pain outcome and urinary outcome between the two groups. CONCLUSIONS: UCPPS with HL displayed more bladder-centric symptom profiles, while UCPPS without HL displayed symptoms suggesting a more systemic pain syndrome. The MAPP-II SPS phenotyping data showed that Hunner lesion is a distinct phenotype from non-Hunner lesion.
Authors: Frederick Wolfe; Daniel J Clauw; Mary-Ann Fitzcharles; Don L Goldenberg; Winfried Häuser; Robert S Katz; Philip Mease; Anthony S Russell; I Jon Russell; John B Winfield Journal: J Rheumatol Date: 2011-02-01 Impact factor: 4.666
Authors: H Henry Lai; John N Krieger; Michel A Pontari; Dedra Buchwald; Xiaoling Hou; J Richard Landis Journal: J Urol Date: 2015-07-17 Impact factor: 7.450
Authors: Deborah R Erickson; John E Tomaszewski; Allen R Kunselman; Christina M Stetter; Kenneth M Peters; Eric S Rovner; Laurence M Demers; Marcia A Wheeler; Susan K Keay Journal: J Urol Date: 2008-03-18 Impact factor: 7.450
Authors: Magnus Fall; Jørgen Nordling; Mauro Cervigni; Paulo Dinis Oliveira; Jennifer Fariello; Philip Hanno; Christina Kåbjörn-Gustafsson; Yr Logadottir; Jane Meijlink; Nagendra Mishra; Robert Moldwin; Loredana Nasta; Jorgen Quaghebeur; Vicki Ratner; Jukka Sairanen; Rajesh Taneja; Hikaru Tomoe; Tomohiro Ueda; Gjertrud Wennevik; Kristene Whitmore; Jean Jacques Wyndaele; Andrew Zaitcev Journal: Scand J Urol Date: 2020-02-28 Impact factor: 1.612