Polyendocrine Metabolic Ovarian Syndrome: New Name to Improve Diagnosis and Care of Condition Affecting 170 Million Women Worldwide 

Global effort changes the name of a significant women’s health condition that was misunderstood to be ‘all about ovarian cysts’

Polyendocrine Metabolic Ovarian Syndrome (PMOS) is the new name for the condition previously known as Polycystic Ovary Syndrome (PCOS), which impacts one in eight, or more than 170 million women worldwide. 

More than 50 patient and professional organizations, including the Endocrine Society, took part in the process to develop the new name. 

PMOS is characterised by fluctuations in hormones, with impacts on weight, metabolic and mental health, skin, and the reproductive system. 

For too long, the name reduced a complex, long-term hormonal or endocrine disorder to a misunderstanding about ‘cysts’ and a focus on ovaries. This contributed to missed diagnoses and inadequate treatment. 

Helena Teede, PhD, director of Monash University’s Monash Centre for Health Research & Implementation and an endocrinologist at Monash Health, led the name change process after spending decades researching the condition and seeing the patient impacts firsthand. 

“What we now know is that there is actually no increase in abnormal cysts on the ovary, and the diverse features of the condition were often unappreciated,” says Teede, who is an Endocrine Society member. “It was heart-breaking to see the delayed diagnosis, limited awareness and inadequate care afforded those affected by this neglected condition. 

“While international guidelines have advanced awareness and care, a name change was the next critical step towards recognition and improvement in the long-term impacts of this condition.” 

The name change journey, published today in The Lancet, took 14 years of global collaboration between experts and those with lived experience. 

Teede led the process alongside International Androgen Excess and Polycystic Ovary Syndrome Society (AE-PCOS Society) president, Professor Terhi Piltonen, an international co-lead from Oulu University and Oulu University Hospital, Finland; AE-PCOS Society executive director Anuja Dokras from the U.S. and chair of Verity (PCOS UK) Rachel Morman, with 56 patient and professional organizations, including the Endocrine Society. 

In a related paper by the same experts, researchers have found there is no increase in abnormal ovarian cysts in the condition, further demonstrating the need to change the name. 

The patient-focused effort resulted in more than 22,000 survey responses and involved multiple international workshops with patients and multidisciplinary health professionals. 

The three-year transition period is supported by a major international education and awareness campaign reaching those affected — health professionals, governments, and researchers around the world — with the new name to be fully implemented in the 2028 International Guideline update. 

Teede says it was the largest initiative to change the name of a medical condition.  “The agreed principles of the new name included patient benefit, scientific accuracy, ease of communication, avoidance of stigma, cultural appropriateness and accompanying implementation,” she says. “This change was driven with and for those affected by the condition and we are proud to have arrived at a new name that finally accurately reflects the complexity of the condition. Make no mistake, this is a landmark moment that will lead to desperately needed worldwide advancements in clinical practice and research.” 

Piltonen said an important part of the renaming process was considering the diverse needs of various cultures. 

“It was essential that the new name was scientifically correct but also considered across diverse cultural contexts to avoid certain reproductive terms that could heighten stigma and be harmful for women in some countries,” Piltonen says. “This made a culturally and internationally informed consultation critical to getting it right.” 

Lorna Berry, an Australian woman who has PMOS and played a key role in the renaming process, said the result will be life changing. 

“This is about accountability and progress,” she says. “It is about my daughters, their daughters, and the countless women yet to be born. We deserve clarity, understanding, and equitable healthcare from the very beginning.” 

Rachel Morman, chair of Verity (PCOS UK), was a lived experience expert on the global name change process and said the previous name misrepresented the true nature of this condition.  “It is fantastic that the new name now leads with hormones and recognizes the metabolic dimension of the condition,” she says. “This shift will reframe the conversation and demand that it is taken as seriously as the long-term, complex health condition it is. Despite decades of tireless advocacy to improve awareness, we recognized that the risk of change would be worth the reward.” 

Find out more about the name change and access PMOS resources in multiple languages on the Monash Centre for Health Research and Implementation website

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