Prostatitis Classification: NIH Categories I-IV – Complete Guide
- Why was the NIH classification developed?
- Type I – Acute bacterial prostatitis
- Type II – Chronic bacterial prostatitis
- Type III – CP/CPPS (chronic pelvic pain syndrome)
- Type IV – Asymptomatic inflammatory prostatitis
- Diagnostic criteria – Meares-Stamey 4-glass test, EPS analysis
- Clinical features by type – comparison table
- Interactive FAQ – 9 questions about prostatitis classification
Why was the NIH classification developed?
Before the NIH classification (1999), terminology for prostatitis was confusing and inconsistent. Terms like "prostatodynia" and "non-bacterial prostatitis" were used without standardised definitions.
The NIH Consensus Classification categorises prostatitis into four distinct types based on:
- Clinical presentation (symptoms)
- Presence or absence of bacteria in urine and expressed prostatic secretion (EPS)
- White blood cells (WBCs) in EPS
- Duration of symptoms (acute vs. chronic)
Type I – Acute bacterial prostatitis
Acute bacterial prostatitis is a sudden, severe bacterial infection of the prostate. It is a medical emergency.
Diagnostic criteria:
- Acute onset (hours to days)
- Systemic symptoms: Fever (>101°F / 38.5°C), chills, malaise
- Severe perineal or pelvic pain
- Urinary symptoms: Dysuria, frequency, urgency, possible acute urinary retention
- Positive urine culture (usually E. coli, Klebsiella, Proteus)
- WBCs in urine and EPS
Key features:
- DRE: Extremely tender, boggy (soft), warm prostate
- Do NOT massage prostate (risk of bacteremia and sepsis)
- Requires urgent antibiotics (4-6 weeks)
Type II – Chronic bacterial prostatitis
Chronic bacterial prostatitis is characterised by recurrent urinary tract infections (UTIs) with the same bacterial strain.
Diagnostic criteria:
- Recurrent UTIs (≥2 episodes) with the same organism
- Mild to moderate pelvic or perineal pain (may be absent between episodes)
- Mild urinary symptoms (frequency, urgency, dysuria)
- EPS or post-massage urine culture positive for bacteria
- WBCs in EPS
Key features:
- Common bacteria: E. coli, Klebsiella, Enterococcus
- Prostate stones (calculi) are often present (harbour bacteria)
- Requires long-term antibiotics (4-12 weeks)
- May relapse after antibiotics (20-40% recurrence)
Type III – CP/CPPS (chronic pelvic pain syndrome)
Chronic Pelvic Pain Syndrome (CP/CPPS) is the most common form of prostatitis, accounting for 90% of cases. It is NOT caused by bacterial infection.
Diagnostic criteria:
- Pelvic or perineal pain for at least 3 of the last 6 months
- No bacteria in urine, EPS, or semen cultures
- No fever or systemic symptoms
Subtypes (based on EPS WBC count):
- Type IIIA (Inflammatory CP/CPPS): WBCs present in EPS/semen (inflammation present)
- Type IIIB (Non-inflammatory CP/CPPS): No WBCs in EPS/semen
Key features:
- Pain with ejaculation (dysorgasmia) – present in 50-80%
- Perineal, testicular, or lower back pain
- Urinary symptoms (frequency, urgency) – often mild
- No bacteria – antibiotics NOT effective
- Treatment: Multimodal (pelvic floor physical therapy, stress reduction, alpha-blockers, amitriptyline)
Type IV – Asymptomatic inflammatory prostatitis
Asymptomatic inflammatory prostatitis is found incidentally and causes no symptoms.
Diagnostic criteria:
- WBCs in EPS, semen, or post-prostate massage urine
- No bacteria on culture
- No symptoms (pain, urinary, or sexual)
How it is found:
- Incidental finding on prostate biopsy (inflammation on pathology) – 30-40% of biopsies
- Elevated PSA with negative biopsy (inflammation cause)
- WBCs in semen during infertility evaluation
Treatment:
- Usually NO treatment needed
- Treat only if causing elevated PSA (short course of antibiotics may lower PSA) or infertility (may improve sperm quality)
Diagnostic criteria – Meares-Stamey 4-glass test, EPS analysis
The Meares-Stamey 4-glass test is the gold standard for localising infection to the prostate.
The 4-glass test:
- Glass 1 (VB1): First-void urine (10-15 mL) – urethral sample
- Glass 2 (VB2): Midstream urine (10-15 mL) – bladder sample
- Prostate massage: 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:
- Type I: Bacteria in all specimens + systemic symptoms
- Type II: Bacteria in EPS or VB3 only (localised to prostate)
- Type IIIA: WBCs in EPS/VB3, no bacteria
- Type IIIB: No WBCs or bacteria in any specimen
- Type IV: WBCs in EPS/VB3, no symptoms
Clinical features by type – comparison table
| Feature | Type I (Acute Bacterial) | Type II (Chronic Bacterial) | Type III (CP/CPPS) | Type IV (Asymptomatic) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Prevalence | 5-10% | 5-10% | 80-90% | Common (incidental) |
| Fever | ✓ Yes (high) | ✗ No | ✗ No | ✗ No |
| Pelvic pain | ✓ Severe | ✓ Mild | ✓ Moderate-severe | ✗ No |
| Pain with ejaculation | ✓ Possible | ✓ Possible | ✓ Common (50-80%) | ✗ No |
| Urinary symptoms | ✓ Severe | ✓ Mild | ✓ Mild-moderate | ✗ No |
| WBCs in urine/EPS | ✓ Yes | ✓ Yes | IIIA: Yes; IIIB: No | ✓ Yes |
| Bacteria in culture | ✓ Yes | ✓ Yes (EPS/VB3) | ✗ No | ✗ No |
| Treatment | IV/oral antibiotics | Oral antibiotics (4-12 weeks) | Multimodal (PT, meds, stress)None (usually) |
Interactive FAQ – Prostatitis classification
Type I (acute bacterial), Type II (chronic bacterial), Type III (CP/CPPS), Type IV (asymptomatic inflammatory).
Type III – CP/CPPS (chronic pelvic pain syndrome) – accounts for 90% of cases.
IIIA: WBCs in EPS/semen (inflammatory); IIIB: no WBCs (non-inflammatory). Treatment is similar.
Usually no – only treat if causing elevated PSA or infertility.
A 4-glass test that localises infection to the prostate – gold standard for chronic bacterial prostatitis.
Mild cases may be treated with oral antibiotics. Severe cases (high fever, sepsis) require hospitalisation and IV antibiotics.
No – by definition, no bacteria are found. Antibiotics are NOT effective.
Recurrent UTIs with the same organism + positive EPS or post-massage urine culture.
No – asymptomatic inflammation does not increase prostate cancer risk.
Disclaimer: This information is for educational purposes and intended for clinicians and researchers. The NIH classification is the standard for prostatitis diagnosis.