Can affect both sexes, but vast majority (90%) are female
2.7-6.5% of US females have symptoms consistent with a diagnosis of IC/BPS (wide variation in reported incidence and prevalence depending on the criteria used for diagnosis)
Characteristic presentation includes a combination of pain, frequency, nocturia, and urgency
Pelvic pain is the main descriptor of IC/BPS
Pain that occurs only during voiding is not consistent with IC/BPS
Vulvar disorders, which cause pain when urine makes contact with the vulva, should instead be considered
In early or milder IC/BPS, patients may not describe frank pain, but rather describe sensations of “pressure,” “burning,” “sharp,” or “uncomfortable sensation of having to urinate.” Typically, this sensation is felt in the supra-pubic area, but it can be referred to areas located in the pelvis, including the urethra, vagina, labia, inguinal area, perineum, and/or lower abdomen or back
Frequency is the most common presenting symptom i.e. patients seek medical attention for frequency, not the pain
Patients may describe periods of worsening symptoms, which may be triggered by stress, intercourse, menses, or consumption of coffee, alcohol, citrus fruits, tomatoes, carbonated beverages, and spicy foods
Symptoms of IC/BPS are generally worse a few days prior to menses, in contrast to endometriosis, which is worse during menses
Abdominal and pelvic exam, with particular focus on looking for masses, bladder distension, hernias, and tenderness.
The female pelvic exam should screen for vulvodynia, vaginitis, atrophic changes, prolapse, cervical pathology, and adnexal masses or tenderness.
Point tenderness, a mass, and expression of pus on palpation of the urethra are classic signs of a urethral diverticulum.
Digital rectal examination in males is essential
A musculoskeletal and focused neurological exam may also be contributory.
Although there is no physical finding specific to patients with IC/BPS, suprapubic tenderness and bladder neck point tenderness, in both males and females, is very often noted.
In males, tenderness may be elicited by palpating the perineal area between the scrotum and anus
In females, palpating the anterior vaginal wall along the course of the urethra up to the bladder neck may elicit pain.
Palpation of the levator muscles in both sexes, looking for tenderness, spasm/tight bands, and/or trigger points, is important for both diagnosis and treatment recommendations
Pelvic floor or rectal spasms may respond well to pelvic floor physiotherapy.
Hypo or hypersensitivity of the perineum, in combination with a weak or absent anal reflex, may suggest pudendal nerve entrapment.
Recommended with a history of poor emptying and/or palpable bladder
Urine cytology
Indicated if microscopic hematuria is present or if there are other risk factors for urothelial carcinoma
Imaging
Abdominal or pelvic ultrasonography, or other imaging modalities, may be useful when alternative clinical conditions are questioned, but are expected to be normal if IC/BPS is the only diagnosis.
Intravesical anesthetic challenge
An anesthetic challenge test, such as an alkalized lidocaine test, instills 10‒20 mL of an anesthetic mixture into an empty bladder. This fluid is held for 10‒15 minutes and then drained by catheter.
This test can be performed after cystoscopy and can provide both relief to the patient, as well as diagnostic information and guide future therapy.
Hydrodistension (HD)
Performed under general or regional anesthetic
Bladder is filled with NS by gravity drainage at a pressure of 80 cm H2O to its maximum anesthetic capacity (determined whereby the inflow backs up in the drip chamber or leakage occurs per urethra despite compression against the cystoscope) and distension is maintained for 2 to no more than 10 minutes; the bladder is drained at the end and capacity is measured
HD under general anesthetic allows for stratification of patients into those with ulcers and glomerulations from those with no obvious mucosal abnormalities
As the literature is conflicting regarding its utility, HD for diagnostic purposes may be appropriate in certain situations such as:
Patient is unable to tolerate cystoscopy under local anesthetic and is having a general anesthetic
When a patient has failed other treatment options and HD to assess disease severity may contribute information to the diagnosis
Assessing a patient for clinical trial eligibility
Based on the assumption that a “dysfunctional epithelium” (glycosaminoglycan [GAG] layer) allows potassium ions to cross the abnormally permeable urothelium, depolarize nerves and muscles, and results in pain.
Sensitivity/specificity of the test are poor, adding no information over history and cystoscopy.
Bladder biopsy
There are no specific features found on bladder biopsy to confirm a diagnosis of IC/BPS.
Common food triggers includecoffee, tea, citrus fruits, carbonated and alcoholic beverages, bananas, tomatoes, spicy foods, artificial sweeteners, vitamin C, and wheat products.
Dietary modifications, such as a steady intake of water to dilute urine and reduce constipation, and an elimination diet trial have been advocated. No standardized protocol exists, but common practice is to instruct patients to avoid all foods on the list for a period varying from 1 week to 3 months and then methodically re-introduce one item at a time, with a waiting period of 3 days to identify potential offenders.
Only one placebo-controlled, RCT on the effect of diet in IC/BPS has been published, which failed to report any significant association.
Bladder retraining
The goal is to reduce voiding frequency, potentially increase bladder capacity, and reduce the need to void in response to urgency or pain. Options include timed voiding and urge suppression.
Stress management and psychological support (select patients) in patients with stress or psychological dysfunction
Physical therapy techniques (select patients)
Pelvic floor physiotherapy can be recommended for patients identified with pelvic floor dysfunction
Massage techniques, acupuncture, and trigger point injections are options for patients with pelvic floor tenderness.
Hydroxyzine 10–50 mg po qhs (perhaps in patients with an allergy history)
Pentosan polysulfate 100 mg po tid (PPS, Elmiron)
Expected benefits are predicted to be marginal
Common side effects included: diarrhea (25%); headache (18.2%); nausea (15%); pelvic pain (13%); abdominal pain (13%); and alopecia (5%).
Gabapentinoids
Option in patients with neuropathic pain
Quercetin
Cyclosporine A
Close patient monitoring, including blood pressure, Cr and CyA levels are necessary. Due to the potential for serious side effects, should be reserved for severe patients with inflammation refractory to other treatment options.
MOA: organic solvent with anti-inflammatory and analgesic properties
Administered as a 50 mL solution of 50% DMSO with a dwell time of 30‒60 minutes, once weekly for 6 weeks. Monthly maintenance doses may be considered.
Overall, favourable safety profile. Typical side effects include halitosis (garlic-like breath, as it is eliminated through the lungs) and potential flare-up after the first instillation, which usually improves after the second one.
Theoretically may cause dissolution of collagen that could potentially cause bladder fibrosis if used on a long-term basis.
Heparin (alone or in combination)
MOA: GAG analogue
May be instilled intravesically with virtually no systemic absorption
DMSO combined with heparin better than DMSO alone (further reduces and defers relapses)
Lidocaine
MOA: local anesthetic
Instillation on a daily or weekly basis of alkalinized lidocaine
Option for short-term relief IC/BPS symptoms, primarily bladder pain
MOA: May help replenish the GAG layer of the bladder.
Efficacy unknown; 3 negative trials have been completed without published results
Chondroitin sulfate
MOA: May help replenish the GAG layer of the bladder.
Should not be used as monotherapy, but may be considered as part of multimodal therapy for IC/BPS.
Pentosan polysulfate (PPS, Elmiron)
MOA: a weak analogue of heparin, may replenish the deficient GAG layer
Intravesical PPS may be more effective than oral since only 1‒3% of oral PPS reaches the bladder.
May be used alone or in combination with oral PPS
Oxybutynin
Not recommended (resiniferatoxin, BCG):
Resiniferatoxin (RTX)
A potent analogue of the chili pepper extract capsaicin; a neurotoxin that desensitizes C-fiber afferent neurons that transmit pain and, thus, could alleviate pain in IC/BPS.
Based on conflicting Level 2 evidence and the adverse side effect profile, RTX is not recommended
Last resort due to the invasiveness of surgery (substitution cystoplasty or urinary diversion ± cystectomy), the benign nature of IC/BPS, and multiple other treatment options available
As per the CUA guidelines, what are the mandatory investigations in a patient being referred for suspected interstitial cystitis? What are the recommended investigations? What are the optional investigations? What investigations are not recommended?
What is the most common presenting symptom in a patient with interstitial cystitis?
What is the differential diagnosis of a patient presenting with symptoms suggestive of interstitial cystitis?
What are the first-line treatment options for interstitial cystitis?
What are recommended second-line oral treatment options for interstitial cystitis? Intravesical options?
What are minimally invasive surgical procedures for patients with interstitial cystitis?
An unpleasant sensation perceived to be from the bladder
Associated with lower urinary tract symptoms
For >6 weeks duration
In the absence of infection or other identifiable causes
As per the CUA guidelines, what are the mandatory investigations in a patient being referred for suspected interstitial cystitis? What are the recommended investigations? What are the optional investigations? What investigations are not recommended?
Mandatory: history and physical
Recommended: urinalysis/culture, symptoms scores, frequency volume chart, cystoscopy