PMOS Diagnostic Criteria & Lab Guide

PMOS Diagnostic Criteria and Lab Guide

PMOS clinical reference

Diagnostic criteria and lab interpretation

PMOS is the 2026 name for PCOS. Criteria and management remain based on PCOS guidelines until new clinical guidance supersedes them.

Apply the adult or adolescent criteria, then draw labs for confirmation, exclusion, and risk screening.

This tool is for clinician-facing decision support. It does not diagnose a patient or replace local lab reference ranges, pregnancy evaluation, medication review, or specialist judgment.

Schematic of PMOS endocrine and metabolic assessment

Criteria Checker

Total testosterone, free testosterone, SHBG

Elevated total or calculated free testosterone supports biochemical hyperandrogenism. Low SHBG can amplify free androgen exposure and is often seen with insulin resistance, obesity, or hypothyroidism.

Interpret using a high-quality assay and the lab's sex- and age-specific reference range.

DHEA-S and androstenedione

Mild to moderate elevation can occur in PMOS. Marked elevation, rapid virilization, or abrupt symptom onset should prompt evaluation for adrenal or ovarian androgen-secreting tumors.

DHEA-S points more toward adrenal androgen contribution.

AMH or pelvic ultrasound

In adults, AMH may be used instead of ultrasound to define polycystic ovarian morphology. AMH should not be used alone, and ultrasound or AMH is unnecessary when ovulatory dysfunction and hyperandrogenism are both present.

Do not use AMH or ultrasound for adolescent diagnosis.

Pregnancy test

Draw urine or serum hCG in anyone with amenorrhea or pregnancy potential before attributing cycle changes to PMOS.

Positive hCG changes the pathway immediately.

TSH and prolactin

Abnormal TSH can indicate thyroid disease causing irregular cycles. Elevated prolactin can suppress ovulation and may require repeat fasting morning testing, medication review, pituitary evaluation, or endocrinology referral.

These are routine exclusion labs.

Early morning 17-hydroxyprogesterone

Elevation screens for nonclassic congenital adrenal hyperplasia. Borderline or high values generally need confirmatory testing such as ACTH stimulation according to local endocrine protocols.

Best drawn in the morning, follicular phase if cycling.

FSH, LH, estradiol when indicated

Use when amenorrhea is prolonged, body weight or exercise history suggests hypothalamic suppression, or premature ovarian insufficiency is possible. High FSH with low estradiol argues away from typical PMOS.

LH:FSH ratio is not required for diagnosis.

75-g oral glucose tolerance test

Preferred for detecting dysglycemia in PMOS when feasible, especially before pregnancy or fertility treatment. Abnormal fasting, 1-hour, or 2-hour glucose should be managed using diabetes or prediabetes standards.

A1c can miss early dysglycemia in some patients.

Hemoglobin A1c and fasting glucose

Useful when OGTT is not practical and for longitudinal monitoring. Interpret using standard diabetes and prediabetes cutoffs, while considering anemia, hemoglobin variants, pregnancy, and recent blood loss.

Repeat periodically based on risk.

Fasting lipid panel

Elevated triglycerides, elevated LDL-C, low HDL-C, or high non-HDL cholesterol support cardiometabolic risk assessment and prevention planning.

Combine with blood pressure and waist/BMI context.

ALT, AST, and sleep apnea risk

Transaminases are not diagnostic for PMOS, but abnormal results can support evaluation for metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease. Screen clinically for obstructive sleep apnea when symptoms or risk factors are present.

Use local pathways for abnormal results.

Best draw conditions

For reproductive hormones, draw early morning when possible. If cycles are present, follicular-phase sampling is often easiest to interpret. Document cycle day, last menstrual period, and current medications.

Reference intervals vary by assay and cycle phase.

Hormonal contraception

Combined hormonal contraception can suppress endogenous androgens and alter SHBG, so biochemical androgen testing may be misleading during use or soon after stopping.

Use clinical history when labs are confounded.

Red flags

Rapid onset virilization, severe androgen elevation, Cushingoid features, galactorrhea with high prolactin, primary amenorrhea, or neurologic symptoms should shift from routine PMOS workup to targeted evaluation.

Escalate to endocrinology or urgent imaging when appropriate.

AMH for adult PMOS/PCOS morphology

There is no single universal "elevated AMH" cutoff for PMOS. The 2023 guideline says laboratories should use population- and assay-specific cutoffs, and AMH should not be used as a standalone diagnostic test.

Adult useMay substitute for ultrasound to define PCOM in adults only.
AdolescentsDo not use AMH for diagnosis.
Practical read"Elevated" means above the lab's age- and assay-specific upper range.
Example onlyLabcorp AMH upper ranges: 20-25 y 11.51, 26-30 y 11.10, 31-35 y 8.75, 36-40 y 8.34 ng/mL.

Glucose cutoffs

Use standard diabetes criteria. A separate pregnancy pathway is needed for gestational diabetes screening.

TestNormalPrediabetes / diabetes
A1c<5.7%5.7-6.4% / >=6.5%
Fasting plasma glucose<100 mg/dL100-125 / >=126 mg/dL
2-hour 75-g OGTT<140 mg/dL140-199 / >=200 mg/dL

Exclusion and androgen interpretation

These are common adult interpretive anchors. Always compare against the reporting lab's range, units, method, age, pregnancy status, and medication context.

hCGNegative is typically <5 mIU/mL; positive redirects the workup.
TSHCommon adult reference range about 0.4-4.0 mIU/L; pregnancy and thyroid treatment targets differ.
ProlactinNonpregnant reference often <25 ng/mL. Repeat mild elevations fasting/morning and review meds, stress, pregnancy, hypothyroidism.
17-hydroxyprogesteroneEarly-morning value >200 ng/dL can prompt ACTH stimulation testing for nonclassic CAH.
Total/free testosteroneElevated = above adult female normative range for that assay. LC-MS/MS is preferred for total testosterone in women.
DHEA-SAge-specific. Mild elevation can occur in PMOS; >700 mcg/dL is a red flag for adrenal source.
AndrostenedioneAssay-specific; values >=500 ng/dL can suggest an androgen-secreting adrenal or gonadal tumor.
Severe androgen red flagsRapid virilization, total testosterone >150-200 ng/dL, adult-male-range testosterone, or DHEA-S >700 mcg/dL needs targeted evaluation.

Lipid and cardiometabolic flags

PMOS metabolic screening should be interpreted with blood pressure, BMI/waist context, diabetes status, smoking, family history, pregnancy plans, and ASCVD risk.

Total cholesterolDesirable <200 mg/dL; high >=240 mg/dL.
LDL-COften "optimal" <100 mg/dL, but treatment targets depend on risk category.
HDL-CLow in women: <50 mg/dL.
TriglyceridesNormal <150 mg/dL; high >=200 mg/dL; very high >=500 mg/dL.
ALT / ASTNo PMOS diagnostic cutoff. Elevation should trigger liver-risk review and local MASLD pathway.

Evidence Base

2023 International Evidence-Based PCOS Guideline Endocrine Society PCOS Clinical Practice Guideline ACOG PCOS FAQ Endocrine Society PMOS name-change announcement ADA diabetes diagnosis cutoffs MedlinePlus prolactin reference Mayo testosterone interpretation