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The International Continence Society (ICS) report on the terminology for adult male lower urinary tract and pelvic floor symptoms and dysfunction

Carlos Arturo Levi D’Ancona<!--<label>1</label>--> Universidade Estadual de Campinas São Paulo BrazilBernard T. Haylen<!--<label>2</label>--> University of New South Wales Sydney AustraliaMatthias Oelke<!--<label>3</label>--> St. Antonius Hospital Gronau GermanyLuís Abranches Monteiro<!--<label>4</label>--> Hospital Beatriz Ângelo Loures Lisbon PortugalE. P. Arnold<!--<label>5</label>--> University of Otago Christchurch New ZealandHoward B. Goldman<!--<label>6</label>--> Cleveland Clinic Cleveland OhioRizwan Hamid<!--<label>7</label>--> University College Hospitals London United KingdomYukio Homma<!--<label>8</label>--> Japanese Red Cross Medical Centre Tokyo JapanTom Marcelissen<!--<label>9</label>--> Maastricht University Maastricht The NetherlandsKevin Rademakers<!--<label>9</label>--> Maastricht University Maastricht The NetherlandsAlexis Schizas<!--<label>10</label>--> Guy's &amp; St Thomas's Hospitals London United KingdomAjay Singla<!--<label>11</label>--> Massachusetts General Hospital Harvard BostonIrela Soto<!--<label>12</label>--> Complejo Hospitalario Panama City PanamaVincent Tse<!--<label>13</label>--> University of Sydney Sydney AustraliaStefan De Wachter<!--<label>14</label>--> University of Antwerp Antwerp BelgiumSender Herschorn<!--<label>15</label>--> University of Toronto Ontario Canada
2019en
ABI

Аннотация

INTRODUCTION: In the development of terminology of the lower urinary tract, due to its increasing complexity, the terminology for male lower urinary tract and pelvic floor symptoms and dysfunction needs to be updated using a male-specific approach and via a clinically-based consensus report. METHODS: This report combines the input of members of the Standardisation Committee of the International Continence Society (ICS) in a Working Group with recognized experts in the field, assisted by many external referees. Appropriate core clinical categories and a subclassification were developed to give a numeric coding to each definition. An extensive process of 22 rounds of internal and external review was developed to exhaustively examine each definition, with decision-making by collective opinion (consensus). RESULTS: A Terminology Report for male lower urinary tract and pelvic floor symptoms and dysfunction, encompassing around 390 separate definitions/descriptors, has been developed. It is clinically-based with the most common diagnoses defined. Clarity and user-friendliness have been key aims to make it interpretable by practitioners and trainees in all the different specialty groups involved in male lower urinary tract and pelvic floor dysfunction. Male-specific imaging (ultrasound, radiology, CT, and MRI) has been a major addition whilst appropriate figures have been included to supplement and help clarify the text. CONCLUSIONS: A consensus-based Terminology Report for male lower urinary tract and pelvic floor symptoms and dysfunction has been produced aimed at being a significant aid to clinical practice and a stimulus for research.

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