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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2009 Feb 1.
Published in final edited form as: Int J Antimicrob Agents. 2007 Dec 31;31(Suppl 1):S85–S90. doi: 10.1016/j.ijantimicag.2007.08.028

Table 1.

Classification of prostatitis syndromes1

Category Name Characteristics
I Acute bacterial prostatitis Acute bacterial infection
Acute urinary tract infection
II Chronic bacterial prostatitis Persistent bacterial infection
Recurrent urinary tract infections
III Chronic prostatitis/chronic pelvic pain syndrome Characteristic pelvic pains, urinary complaints and sexual dysfunction
Absence of other urological disorders2
Subtype a Inflammatory subtype Leukocytes in the expressed prostatic fluid, post-prostate massage fluid or seminal fluid
Subtype b Non-inflammatory subtype No inflammation in the expressed prostatic fluid, post-prostate massage fluid or seminal fluid
IV Asymptomatic inflammatory Asymptomatic patients with inflammatory infiltrates in prostate tissue or seminal fluid specimens evaluated for other indications 3
1

After reference [1]

2

Patients with potentially significant urological causes are excluded from the chronic prostatitis/chronic pelvic pain category. These exclusion criteria include: duration less than 3 months, presence of lower genitourinary tract cancer (i.e., transitional cell carcinoma, carcinoma in situ, or prostate cancer), active urolithiasis, active urogenital tract infection (i.e., bacteriuria, genital herpes, genitourinary tuberculosis), gastrointestinal disorders (i.e., fissure in ano, inflammatory bowel disease, fistula), radiation of chemical cystitis, acute urethritis, acute epididymitis, acute orchitis, functionally significant urethral stricture disease, or neurological disorder affecting the bladder.

3

Asymptomatic patients may be diagnosed while undergoing evaluation for suspicion of prostate cancer (e.g., elevated PSA or prostate nodule) or have seminal inflammation noted during evaluation of infertility.