Prostatitis Diagnosis: How Doctors Diagnose Prostate Inflammation
- Diagnostic approach – step by step
- Medical history and symptom assessment
- Digital Rectal Exam (DRE)
- Urinalysis and urine culture
- Meares-Stamey 4-glass test – gold standard
- Expressed Prostatic Secretion (EPS)
- Semen analysis and culture
- Blood tests – PSA, CBC, inflammatory markers
- Imaging – TRUS, MRI, CT
- Urodynamics and cystoscopy
- Interactive FAQ – 9 questions about prostatitis diagnosis
Diagnostic approach – step by step
Diagnosing prostatitis involves a systematic approach to identify the type (acute bacterial, chronic bacterial, CP/CPPS, or asymptomatic) and rule out other conditions:
- Step 1: Medical history and symptom assessment
- Step 2: Digital Rectal Exam (DRE)
- Step 3: Urinalysis and urine culture
- Step 4: Meares-Stamey 4-glass test or EPS culture (for chronic symptoms)
- Step 5: Imaging if complications suspected (abscess, stones)
- Step 6: Urodynamics or cystoscopy for complex cases
Medical history and symptom assessment
The first step is a thorough history to characterise symptoms:
- Pain location: Perineal, testicular, suprapubic, lower back
- Pain with ejaculation: Hallmark of CP/CPPS (50-80% of patients)
- Urinary symptoms: Frequency, urgency, dysuria, weak stream
- Systemic symptoms: Fever, chills (suggest acute bacterial)
- Duration: >3 months = chronic
- Prior UTIs or prostatitis episodes
- Risk factors: Catheterisation, STI exposure, immunosuppression
Digital Rectal Exam (DRE)
DRE findings vary by prostatitis type and are crucial for diagnosis:
Acute bacterial prostatitis (Type I):
- Extremely tender prostate – patient may not tolerate full exam
- Boggy (soft), warm – indicates inflammation
- Do NOT massage – can cause bacteremia and sepsis
Chronic bacterial prostatitis (Type II):
- Mild tenderness or normal
- May feel irregular (prostate stones)
CP/CPPS (Type III):
- Normal or mild tenderness
- Pelvic floor muscles may be tender
Asymptomatic (Type IV):
- Normal DRE
Urinalysis and urine culture
Urinalysis and culture are essential to rule out UTI and identify bacteria:
- Urinalysis: White blood cells (WBCs), nitrites, bacteria, blood
- Urine culture: Identifies bacteria and antibiotic sensitivity
- Midstream clean-catch urine – standard
- First-void urine – may detect urethritis
Interpretation:
- Positive urine culture + systemic symptoms = acute bacterial prostatitis
- Negative urine culture + chronic pain = CP/CPPS
- Negative urine culture + recurrent UTIs = chronic bacterial prostatitis (need EPS culture)
Meares-Stamey 4-glass test – gold standard
The Meares-Stamey 4-glass test is the gold standard for localising infection to the prostate. It involves collecting 4 specimens:
- Glass 1 (VB1): First-void urine (10-15 mL) – urethral sample
- Glass 2 (VB2): Midstream urine (10-15 mL) – bladder sample
- Prostate massage: The urologist massages the prostate to express prostatic secretions
- Glass 3 (EPS): Expressed Prostatic Secretion – prostatic sample
- Glass 4 (VB3): Urine after prostate massage (first 10-15 mL) – post-massage urine
Interpretation:
- Bacteria in EPS or VB3 only: Chronic bacterial prostatitis (Type II)
- Bacteria in all specimens: UTI with prostatic involvement
- WBCs in EPS/VB3 but no bacteria: CP/CPPS Type IIIA (inflammatory)
- No WBCs or bacteria: CP/CPPS Type IIIB (non-inflammatory)
Expressed Prostatic Secretion (EPS)
EPS is obtained by prostate massage and examined under a microscope:
- WBC count: >10 WBCs per high-power field (HPF) indicates inflammation
- Lipid-laden macrophages (oval fat bodies): Sign of prostatic inflammation
- Culture: Identifies bacteria (gold standard for chronic bacterial prostatitis)
Indications for EPS:
- Suspected chronic bacterial prostatitis (recurrent UTIs)
- Differentiating Type IIIA vs. IIIB
- Infertility evaluation with suspected prostatic inflammation
Semen analysis and culture
Semen analysis is an alternative to EPS and is often better tolerated by patients:
- WBC count: >1 million WBCs/mL indicates inflammation (leukocytospermia)
- Culture: Can identify bacteria in the prostate and seminal vesicles
- Advantages: Less invasive than EPS, no prostate massage needed
- Disadvantages: Cannot distinguish between prostate and seminal vesicle source
Blood tests – PSA, CBC, inflammatory markers
PSA (Prostate-Specific Antigen):
- Often elevated in prostatitis (especially acute bacterial)
- Can be >10-20 ng/mL in acute cases
- Do NOT biopsy during acute infection – wait 6-8 weeks after treatment
- PSA normalises after infection resolves
Complete Blood Count (CBC):
- Elevated WBC count suggests bacterial infection
- Neutrophilia (high neutrophils) in acute bacterial prostatitis
Inflammatory markers (ESR, CRP):
- Elevated in acute bacterial prostatitis
- Usually normal in CP/CPPS
Imaging – TRUS, MRI, CT
Imaging is not routinely needed but is useful when complications are suspected:
Transrectal Ultrasound (TRUS):
- Detects prostate abscess (hypoechoic area with vascularity)
- Identifies prostate stones (calculi) – common in chronic bacterial prostatitis
- Measures prostate volume
- Can guide abscess drainage
MRI (Multiparametric MRI):
- Best imaging for prostate abscess
- Can distinguish prostatitis from prostate cancer
- Useful when cancer is suspected despite infection
CT scan:
- Less useful than MRI or TRUS for prostate
- May be used to rule out other causes of pelvic pain
Urodynamics and cystoscopy
These tests are reserved for complex cases:
Urodynamics:
- Indicated when bladder dysfunction is suspected
- Distinguishes bladder outlet obstruction from detrusor underactivity
- Not routinely needed for prostatitis diagnosis
Cystoscopy:
- Indicated for hematuria, recurrent UTIs, or suspected urethral stricture
- Can visualise the prostatic urethra and bladder
- Not needed for uncomplicated prostatitis
Interactive FAQ – Prostatitis diagnosis
The Meares-Stamey 4-glass test (urine and expressed prostatic secretion cultures) is the gold standard for localising infection to the prostate.
Blood tests (CBC, CRP) can support the diagnosis of acute bacterial prostatitis but are not specific. PSA is often elevated but does not diagnose prostatitis.
Gentle DRE is safe but can be painful. In acute bacterial prostatitis, do NOT massage the prostate – this can cause sepsis.
Expressed Prostatic Secretion – fluid obtained by prostate massage, examined for WBCs and cultured for bacteria.
Ultrasound (TRUS) can detect prostate abscess and stones but cannot diagnose uncomplicated prostatitis.
IIIA: WBCs in EPS/semen (inflammatory). IIIB: No WBCs (non-inflammatory). Both have no bacteria.
No – CP/CPPS (90% of cases) has normal urine tests. Only bacterial prostatitis shows WBCs or bacteria.
Diagnosis requires symptoms for >3 months and exclusion of other causes. The 4-glass test takes 1-2 weeks for culture results.
Prostatitis can cause elevated PSA and hard DRE findings, mimicking cancer. MRI or biopsy may be needed to distinguish.
Disclaimer: This information is for educational purposes. Prostatitis diagnosis requires a urologist's evaluation. Consult a specialist at Vivekananda Hospital for proper testing and diagnosis.