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PMOS—Formerly PCOS—as a Hormonal and Metabolic Pattern

Learn how PMOS, formerly PCOS, affects hormones, ovulation, metabolism, fertility, and which lab tests may provide clearer health insights.
July 10, 2026
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Contents

Polyendocrine Metabolic Ovarian Syndrome, or PMOS, is the new name for the condition historically known as Polycystic Ovary Syndrome, or PCOS. The updated name reflects an important fact: this is not simply an ovarian condition or a problem caused by ovarian “cysts.” It is a complex, long-term hormonal and metabolic pattern that may affect menstrual cycles, ovulation, androgen levels, fertility, glucose regulation, cholesterol, skin, hair, energy, weight, and emotional well-being.

The Endocrine Society announced the new PMOS name on May 12, 2026, following an international process involving patients, clinicians, researchers, and professional organizations. During the transition, patient education should use “PMOS, formerly PCOS” so people recognize both names.

Lab testing can provide valuable information about the hormonal and metabolic patterns associated with PMOS. However, there is no single PMOS blood test, and blood testing alone cannot confirm or exclude the condition. Evaluation may include medical history, symptoms, physical examination, laboratory results, and, in some cases, pelvic ultrasound.

Ulta Lab Tests provides direct access to many relevant laboratory tests where available. Testing can help patients gather objective health information to discuss with a qualified healthcare provider. Lab testing is educational and informational and does not replace professional medical advice, diagnosis, imaging, or treatment.

Key Takeaways

  • PMOS is the new name for the condition previously called PCOS.
  • The name emphasizes that the condition involves hormones, metabolism, ovarian function, and multiple body systems—not simply ovarian cysts.
  • There is no single blood test that diagnoses PMOS.
  • Adult evaluation generally considers ovulatory dysfunction, androgen excess, and polycystic ovarian morphology or appropriately interpreted anti-Müllerian hormone.
  • Thyroid disease, elevated prolactin, nonclassic congenital adrenal hyperplasia, pregnancy, and other conditions may produce similar symptoms.
  • Glucose and cholesterol risks may be present even in people with a normal body weight.
  • Lab results should be interpreted as connected patterns and reviewed with a qualified healthcare provider.

What Is PMOS, Formerly PCOS?

PMOS is a hormonal and metabolic disorder that may affect ovarian function, menstrual cycles, androgen production, glucose regulation, and long-term cardiometabolic health.

Androgens are hormones that include testosterone and related compounds. Everyone produces androgens, but higher-than-expected levels or increased tissue sensitivity to them may contribute to excess facial or body hair, persistent acne, or scalp hair thinning.

PMOS may also interfere with ovulation. Some people have infrequent periods, unpredictable cycles, or long gaps between periods. Others may have apparently regular cycles but still experience inconsistent ovulation.

How Is PMOS Evaluated in Adults?

Current international guidance generally supports an adult diagnosis when at least two of the following three features are present after other possible causes have been considered:

  1. Irregular, infrequent, or absent ovulation
  2. Clinical or laboratory evidence of elevated androgens
  3. Polycystic ovarian morphology on ultrasound or, in appropriate adults, an elevated anti-Müllerian hormone level used within a validated diagnostic process

A person does not need to have all three features. A person also does not need to have ovarian cysts in the usual medical meaning of the word. The ovarian appearance associated with PMOS involves the number and distribution of developing follicles rather than harmful or abnormal cysts.

Is PMOS Evaluated Differently in Adolescents?

Yes. Irregular cycles and acne can be common during normal puberty, making evaluation more complicated. In adolescents, both ovulatory dysfunction and clinical or biochemical androgen excess are generally required. Ovarian ultrasound and anti-Müllerian hormone testing are not currently recommended for diagnosing adolescents because they may increase the risk of overdiagnosis.

Answer: PMOS is not diagnosed by one hormone level or by finding ovarian “cysts.” It is identified through a combined assessment of menstrual and ovulatory function, androgen-related findings, ovarian morphology when appropriate, and the exclusion of other conditions.

Why PMOS Matters for Whole-Body Health

PMOS may first appear to be a reproductive or menstrual concern, but its effects can extend well beyond the ovaries.

Reproductive and Hormonal Health

Possible reproductive and hormonal effects include:

  • Irregular or absent menstrual periods
  • Inconsistent ovulation
  • Difficulty becoming pregnant
  • Elevated testosterone or related androgens
  • Excess facial or body hair
  • Persistent acne
  • Scalp hair thinning

Ovulation may occasionally be inconsistent even when menstrual cycles appear regular. When confirmation is clinically needed, a properly timed Progesterone Test may help determine whether ovulation has occurred.

Glucose and Metabolic Health

Insulin resistance is an important biological feature of PMOS. Insulin helps glucose move from the bloodstream into cells. When cells respond less effectively, the body may produce more insulin to maintain normal blood glucose.

Glucose abnormalities can occur in people with PMOS regardless of age or body mass index. Current international guidance recommends assessing glycemic status when PMOS is identified and periodically afterward based on individual risk factors.

Cholesterol and Cardiovascular Risk

PMOS may be associated with elevated triglycerides, low HDL cholesterol, higher LDL cholesterol, high blood pressure, impaired glucose tolerance, and other cardiometabolic risk factors.

Current guidance recommends obtaining a Lipid Panel Test at diagnosis regardless of age or BMI. The timing of future lipid testing depends on the initial results and the person’s broader cardiovascular risk profile.

Endometrial Health

Long periods without ovulation may expose the uterine lining to prolonged estrogen stimulation without regular progesterone exposure. PMOS is associated with an increased risk of endometrial hyperplasia, although the overall likelihood of endometrial cancer remains low and routine cancer screening solely because of PMOS is not generally recommended.

People who have prolonged gaps between periods or unusual bleeding should discuss these symptoms promptly with a healthcare provider.

Mental Health, Sleep, and Quality of Life

PMOS may also be associated with depression, anxiety, body-image concerns, eating disorders, and sleep apnea. Fatigue may come from several overlapping causes, including sleep disruption, glucose dysregulation, iron deficiency, thyroid disease, low vitamin B12, low vitamin D, or emotional strain. Symptoms should not automatically be attributed to PMOS without appropriate evaluation.

Common Symptoms, Risk Factors, and Warning Signs

Symptom or concernWhat it may suggestLab tests that may provide more information
Irregular, infrequent, or absent periodsInconsistent ovulation, pregnancy, thyroid dysfunction, elevated prolactin, or another hormonal conditionhCG Pregnancy Test, TSH Test, Prolactin Test, Total Testosterone Test, SHBG Test, 17-Hydroxyprogesterone Test, and Progesterone Test
Excess facial or body hairClinical androgen excessTotal Testosterone Test, Free Testosterone Test, SHBG Test, DHEA-S Test, and Androstenedione Test
Persistent acnePossible androgen activity, although acne alone is not specific to PMOSTotal Testosterone Test, Free Testosterone Test, SHBG Test, and DHEA-S Test when appropriate
Scalp hair thinningAndrogen activity, thyroid dysfunction, iron deficiency, nutritional concerns, or another causeTotal Testosterone Test, SHBG Test, TSH Test, CBC Test, Ferritin Test, Iron and TIBC Test, and Vitamin D Test
Difficulty becoming pregnantInconsistent ovulation or another reproductive factorProgesterone Test, TSH Test, Prolactin Test, and clinician-directed fertility evaluation
Weight-loss resistance or abdominal weight gainPossible metabolic strain, although these symptoms have many possible causes75-g Oral Glucose Tolerance Test, Fasting Glucose Test, Hemoglobin A1C Test, Lipid Panel Test, Comprehensive Metabolic Panel, and TSH Test
Fatigue or poor recoveryGlucose changes, anemia, low iron, thyroid dysfunction, nutrient deficiency, sleep problems, or another conditionCBC Test, Ferritin Test, Iron and TIBC Test, Vitamin B12 Test, Folate Test, Vitamin D Test, CMP, and TSH Test
Darkened skin foldsPossible elevated insulin exposure or insulin resistance75-g Oral Glucose Tolerance Test, Fasting Glucose Test, and Hemoglobin A1C Test
High triglycerides or low HDL cholesterolPossible cardiometabolic risk patternLipid Panel Test, Glucose Tolerance Test, and Comprehensive Metabolic Panel
Rapidly worsening facial hair, voice changes, or other signs of virilizationPotential androgen-producing disorder requiring prompt medical evaluationClinician-directed Total Testosterone Test, DHEA-S Test, Androstenedione Test, imaging, and additional evaluation

When to Seek Prompt Medical Care

Contact a healthcare provider promptly for:

  • Rapidly progressing facial or body hair
  • Deepening of the voice
  • Sudden severe acne or other signs of virilization
  • Heavy or prolonged bleeding
  • Severe pelvic or abdominal pain
  • Possible pregnancy with pain, bleeding, fainting, or dizziness
  • New neurological symptoms, severe headache, or vision changes
  • Very long gaps between menstrual periods

These findings may require urgent clinical assessment and cannot be evaluated through direct-access blood testing alone.

The Role of Lab Testing in PMOS

Lab testing can help answer several different questions:

  1. Is there laboratory evidence of androgen excess?
  2. Is ovulation occurring?
  3. Could another endocrine condition be causing similar symptoms?
  4. Is there evidence of impaired glucose regulation or abnormal cholesterol?
  5. Could fatigue, hair loss, or poor recovery have an additional cause?

Lab testing cannot independently determine whether someone has PMOS. It also cannot replace a menstrual and medical history, physical examination, ultrasound when indicated, or individualized clinical interpretation.

Why Patterns Matter More Than One Result

A mildly elevated testosterone result may have a different meaning depending on SHBG, symptoms, medications, assay method, menstrual history, and the presence of other abnormal findings.

Similarly, a normal Fasting Glucose Test does not necessarily exclude impaired glucose tolerance. A person’s fasting glucose may remain within range while glucose rises excessively after a measured glucose drink. This is why the 75-g Oral Glucose Tolerance Test has a specific role in PMOS metabolic assessment.

Repeating selected tests may help show whether glucose, cholesterol, thyroid, nutritional, or liver markers are stable, improving, or worsening. However, repeated androgen testing may have a limited role once the diagnostic pattern has been established unless a healthcare provider identifies a specific reason to repeat it.

Hormonal and Ovulation Tests

Lab testWhat it measuresWhy it may be relevantImportant interpretation points
Total Testosterone TestTotal testosterone circulating in the bloodA preferred marker for investigating biochemical androgen excessElevated results may support an androgen-excess pattern. Method quality matters because female testosterone concentrations can be difficult to measure accurately.
Free Testosterone TestTestosterone that is not tightly bound to proteinsMay identify increased biologically available testosterone when total testosterone is not clearly elevatedResults depend on the testing method. Calculated free testosterone or equilibrium dialysis may be preferred over less accurate direct methods.
Sex Hormone-Binding Globulin TestA protein that binds testosterone and other hormonesHelps estimate how much testosterone may be biologically availableSHBG may be affected by insulin, thyroid status, liver function, estrogen-containing medication, body composition, and other factors.
DHEA-S TestAn androgen produced mainly by the adrenal glandsMay add information when testosterone is not elevated or an adrenal source is being consideredAn elevated result is not specific to PMOS. Markedly abnormal results require clinician evaluation.
Androstenedione TestAn androgen produced by the ovaries and adrenal glandsMay provide additional information when testosterone results do not explain symptomsIt is less specific than testosterone and should not be interpreted alone.
Progesterone TestProgesterone produced after ovulationA properly timed result may help determine whether ovulation occurredTiming is critical. A low result may reflect incorrect test timing rather than absent ovulation.
Anti-Müllerian Hormone TestHormone produced by developing ovarian folliclesMay help define polycystic ovarian morphology in adults within an established diagnostic algorithmAMH is not a stand-alone PMOS test and is not recommended for diagnosing adolescents.

An integrated option that measures several related markers is the Testosterone Total and Free and Sex Hormone-Binding Globulin Test.

Tests Used to Exclude Conditions That Can Resemble PMOS

Lab testWhat it measuresWhy it may be relevantImportant interpretation points
TSH TestThyroid-stimulating hormoneThyroid disorders may cause irregular periods, weight changes, fatigue, hair changes, and fertility concernsAn abnormal TSH does not establish PMOS and may point toward a separate thyroid evaluation.
Prolactin TestProlactin produced by the pituitary glandElevated prolactin may cause missed periods, infertility, or milk production outside pregnancy or breastfeedingStress, medication, sleep, exercise, and specimen conditions may temporarily affect prolactin.
17-Hydroxyprogesterone TestA steroid hormone involved in adrenal cortisol productionHelps screen for nonclassic congenital adrenal hyperplasia, which may resemble PMOSTiming and clinical context matter. An abnormal result may require clinician-directed follow-up testing.
hCG Total Quantitative Pregnancy TestHuman chorionic gonadotropinPregnancy should be considered when a menstrual period is late or absentTesting too early may not identify a very recent pregnancy. Seek clinical care for pregnancy accompanied by pain, bleeding, fainting, or dizziness.

Glucose, Cholesterol, and Cardiometabolic Tests

Lab testWhat it measuresWhy it may be relevantImportant interpretation points
Glucose Tolerance Test, 2 Specimens, 75gFasting glucose and the glucose response after a standardized 75-g glucose drinkConsidered the most accurate available glycemic assessment for PMOSRequires fasting, preparation, and timed specimens. Illness, medication, activity, and preparation can affect results.
Fasting Glucose TestBlood glucose after an overnight fastProvides a convenient baseline measure of glucose regulationIt may miss abnormal post-challenge glucose and is less sensitive than an OGTT for PMOS-related glucose assessment.
Hemoglobin A1C TestApproximate average blood glucose over the previous two to three monthsMay be used when an OGTT cannot be completed and can provide longer-term glucose contextAnemia, iron deficiency, hemoglobin variants, pregnancy, kidney disease, and other factors may affect accuracy.
Lipid Panel TestTotal cholesterol, LDL cholesterol, HDL cholesterol, and triglyceridesHelps assess cardiometabolic risk associated with PMOSResults may be influenced by fasting status, diet, medication, recent illness, and genetics.
Comprehensive Metabolic Panel TestGlucose, liver enzymes, kidney markers, electrolytes, calcium, and proteinsProvides broader metabolic, liver, and kidney contextA normal CMP does not exclude PMOS, insulin resistance, impaired glucose tolerance, or metabolic liver disease.
ALT Test, AST Test, and GGT TestEnzymes associated with liver, bile-duct, and, in the case of AST, muscle healthMay help identify possible liver strain when metabolic risk is presentAbnormal results have many possible causes and require clinical interpretation.

Nutritional, Thyroid Autoimmune, and Symptom-Directed Tests

Lab testWhy it may be considered
Complete Blood Count with Differential and PlateletsMay help investigate anemia, heavy bleeding, fatigue, weakness, infection-related patterns, or poor recovery.
Ferritin TestMeasures an iron-storage protein and may help evaluate fatigue, hair shedding, heavy menstrual bleeding, or low iron stores.
Iron and Total Iron-Binding Capacity TestAdds information about circulating iron, iron-binding capacity, and iron availability.
Vitamin B12 TestMay be relevant for fatigue, restricted diets, neurological symptoms, digestive concerns, or people using metformin.
Folate Serum TestMay help assess nutritional status, selected causes of anemia, and preconception nutrition.
Vitamin D 25-Hydroxy Total TestMay be considered when evaluating vitamin D status, bone health, muscle health, or nutritional concerns.
Thyroid Peroxidase Antibodies TestMay be appropriate when thyroid results, symptoms, or personal and family history suggest autoimmune thyroid activity.
Thyroglobulin Antibodies TestMay provide additional autoimmune thyroid information when clinically appropriate.
Celiac Disease Comprehensive PanelMay be considered when digestive symptoms, iron deficiency, nutrient deficiencies, or relevant personal and family history are present.
Creatine Kinase Total TestMay be appropriate when muscle pain, muscle weakness, injury, or unusual exercise-related symptoms are present.

These tests do not diagnose PMOS. They may help investigate symptoms and related health concerns that can occur alongside PMOS or may have another explanation.

A Practical PMOS Testing Approach

Not everyone needs every test. Testing should reflect symptoms, menstrual history, medications, reproductive goals, previous results, and healthcare-provider recommendations.

Level 1: Investigate the Hormonal and Ovulation Pattern

Common starting considerations may include:

This group helps evaluate androgen activity and ovulation. Total and free testosterone are generally the preferred biochemical markers.

Level 2: Exclude Common Look-Alike Conditions

Common considerations may include:

Additional clinician-directed testing may be needed when symptoms are unusual, severe, or rapidly progressing.

Level 3: Assess Metabolic and Cardiovascular Risk

Considerations may include:

Metabolic testing matters even at a normal body weight. International guidance recommends assessing glycemic status when PMOS is identified and repeating the assessment every one to three years based on individual diabetes risk factors.

Level 4: Investigate Whole-Body Symptoms

Depending on symptoms and history, testing may include:

These tests may be useful when fatigue, hair loss, heavy bleeding, restricted eating, digestive symptoms, poor recovery, or nutritional concerns are present.

Important Note About Fasting Insulin

Insulin resistance is central to PMOS biology, but a Fasting Insulin Test is not a stand-alone PMOS test. Current international guidance states that commonly available insulin assays have limited clinical relevance and are not recommended as the primary routine diagnostic approach.

Insulin results can vary by assay, fasting duration, recent activity, stress, and other factors. There is also no universally accepted fasting-insulin cutoff that confirms or excludes insulin resistance in an individual patient.

For guideline-based assessment of glucose risk, the 75-g Oral Glucose Tolerance Test, Fasting Glucose Test, and Hemoglobin A1C Test have clearer roles. A clinician may use an Insulin Test or C-Peptide Test in selected situations, but these results require careful interpretation.

How to Understand PMOS Lab Results

Reference Ranges Are Not Diagnostic Cutoffs

A reference range describes values observed in a laboratory’s comparison population. A result outside the range does not automatically mean that a person has PMOS or another disease. A result within the range also does not necessarily exclude a clinically meaningful hormonal or metabolic pattern.

Assay Methods Matter

Androgen levels in women are much lower than typical male concentrations and can be difficult to measure accurately. Current guidance favors validated liquid chromatography–tandem mass spectrometry, or LC-MS/MS, for total testosterone when available.

Free testosterone should preferably be calculated or measured using an appropriately validated method. Direct free-testosterone immunoassays may have limited sensitivity and accuracy.

Medications Can Affect Results

Hormonal contraceptives may raise SHBG and reduce androgen production, making testosterone results more difficult to interpret. Metformin, corticosteroids, fertility medications, thyroid medication, supplements, and other products may also affect selected tests.

Do not stop or change a medication for testing unless instructed by the prescribing healthcare provider.

Timing May Be Important

One Result Should Not Be Interpreted Alone

Examples of connected patterns include:

Testing may be worth discussing with a healthcare provider when someone experiences:

  • Menstrual cycles that are consistently irregular
  • Long gaps between periods
  • Persistent acne or unwanted facial or body hair
  • Scalp hair thinning
  • Difficulty becoming pregnant
  • A history of elevated testosterone
  • Darkening of skin folds
  • Abnormal glucose or cholesterol results
  • A family history of diabetes
  • Unexplained fatigue or poor recovery
  • Heavy menstrual bleeding
  • Symptoms that continue despite a previous normal screening result
  • A previous PMOS or PCOS diagnosis that did not include metabolic assessment

Testing may also be appropriate before pregnancy or fertility treatment because glucose abnormalities can affect pregnancy health.

  • Review the individual test instructions before visiting the laboratory.
  • Determine whether fasting is required. A glucose tolerance test generally requires an overnight fast.
  • Follow the laboratory’s instructions regarding water, coffee, gum, smoking, and exercise during the fasting period.
  • Bring identification and the required laboratory requisition.
  • Tell the healthcare provider interpreting the results about medications, hormonal contraceptives, supplements, pregnancy, recent illness, and menstrual-cycle timing.
  • Avoid intense exercise before tests that may be affected by muscle activity, such as Creatine Kinase, AST, or other selected enzymes.
  • Do not stop medication unless instructed by the prescribing clinician.
  • Schedule enough time for a Glucose Tolerance Test because multiple specimens are collected over a defined period.

Questions to Ask Your Healthcare Provider

  • Do my symptoms and menstrual history fit a PMOS pattern?
  • Which other conditions should be excluded?
  • Were my testosterone results measured using an appropriate method?
  • Should free testosterone and SHBG be reviewed together?
  • Do I need DHEA-S or androstenedione testing?
  • Could I be ovulating even if my periods seem regular?
  • Would a properly timed progesterone test help assess ovulation?
  • Should I have a 75-g oral glucose tolerance test?
  • How often should my glucose and cholesterol be checked?
  • Could medication or hormonal contraception affect my results?
  • Could fatigue or hair changes be related to thyroid, iron, vitamin, or sleep concerns?
  • Do I need imaging or referral to an endocrinologist, gynecologist, reproductive specialist, or another clinician?

How Ulta Lab Tests Helps

Ulta Lab Tests provides direct online access to many hormone, glucose, cholesterol, thyroid, nutritional, and general health tests where available.

Patients can:

  • Review test information and transparent pricing before ordering
  • Order many laboratory tests directly without using insurance
  • Visit an established laboratory network such as Quest Diagnostics where applicable
  • Use eligible HSA or FSA funds where accepted
  • Receive results through a secure online account
  • Track selected biomarkers over time
  • Download or share results with a qualified healthcare provider

Examples of relevant testing available through Ulta Lab Tests include:

Product availability, specimen requirements, patient preparation, and collection locations should be confirmed before ordering.

Direct-access testing can improve access to personal health information, but it does not replace a clinical evaluation. A healthcare professional should review abnormal, conflicting, or unexpected results.

Frequently Asked Questions

1. What does PMOS stand for?

PMOS stands for Polyendocrine Metabolic Ovarian Syndrome. It is the new name for the condition previously called Polycystic Ovary Syndrome, or PCOS. The updated name better reflects the condition’s hormonal, metabolic, reproductive, and whole-body effects and reduces the mistaken belief that it is mainly caused by ovarian cysts.

2. Is PMOS the same condition as PCOS?

Yes. PMOS is the updated name for the condition historically known as PCOS. The underlying condition and evidence-based clinical framework did not suddenly change with the new terminology. During the transition, medical and patient education may use “PMOS, formerly PCOS” so people searching either term can find and understand the information.

3. Is there one blood test for PMOS?

No. There is no single blood test that confirms or excludes PMOS. Evaluation may include Total Testosterone, Free Testosterone, SHBG, DHEA-S, Progesterone, TSH, Prolactin, 17-Hydroxyprogesterone, glucose testing, and cholesterol testing.

4. What blood tests are commonly used when evaluating PMOS?

Common tests include Total Testosterone, Free Testosterone, SHBG, TSH, Prolactin, and 17-Hydroxyprogesterone. DHEA-S or androstenedione may be added in selected situations. Progesterone may help assess ovulation, while an OGTT, A1C, fasting glucose, and lipid panel may help evaluate metabolic risk.

5. Can you have PMOS with normal testosterone?

Yes. A person may have clinical signs of androgen excess without a clearly elevated testosterone result. Test method, SHBG, medication use, timing, symptoms, and laboratory reference ranges can affect interpretation. DHEA-S or Androstenedione may sometimes provide additional information, but they should not be interpreted alone.

6. Can you have PMOS without ovarian cysts?

Yes. Ovarian cysts are not required. The historical term “polycystic” referred to the appearance of numerous developing ovarian follicles, not necessarily abnormal or harmful cysts. An adult may meet diagnostic criteria through ovulatory dysfunction and androgen excess without requiring ultrasound or AMH testing.

7. What is the preferred glucose test for PMOS?

Current international guidance identifies the 75-g Oral Glucose Tolerance Test as the most accurate available test for assessing glycemic status in PMOS, regardless of BMI. A Fasting Glucose Test or Hemoglobin A1C Test may be used when an OGTT cannot be completed, but they can miss abnormalities that appear after the glucose drink.

8. Should fasting insulin be tested for PMOS?

A Fasting Insulin Test is not recommended as the main routine diagnostic test for PMOS. Insulin resistance is an important part of the condition, but available insulin assays have significant limitations and no universally accepted diagnostic cutoff. A clinician may use insulin testing selectively, but an OGTT, fasting glucose, and A1C have clearer guideline-defined roles.

9. Why are TSH, prolactin, and 17-hydroxyprogesterone tested?

These tests help identify conditions that can resemble PMOS. TSH helps assess thyroid function, Prolactin may identify a pituitary-related cause of irregular or absent periods, and 17-Hydroxyprogesterone may help screen for nonclassic congenital adrenal hyperplasia.

Yes. Glucose abnormalities and other metabolic risks can occur in PMOS regardless of body weight. A normal BMI does not rule out impaired glucose tolerance, abnormal cholesterol, or other cardiometabolic concerns. Testing decisions should be based on the complete health pattern rather than body size alone.

11. How often should glucose testing be repeated?

International guidance recommends assessing glycemic status when PMOS is identified and repeating the assessment every one to three years based on individual diabetes risk factors. People planning pregnancy, undergoing fertility treatment, developing new symptoms, or experiencing changing health risks may need testing at different times under a clinician’s guidance.

Many relevant hormone, glucose, lipid, thyroid, and nutritional tests can be ordered directly through Ulta Lab Tests where available. However, direct-access testing cannot provide a complete PMOS diagnosis. Results should be reviewed with a qualified healthcare provider who can consider symptoms, medical history, medications, physical findings, and imaging when necessary.

Conclusion

PMOS, formerly PCOS, is best understood as a connected hormonal and metabolic pattern rather than an ovarian-cyst disorder or a single abnormal laboratory result.

A thoughtful testing strategy can help:

  • Identify biochemical androgen excess
  • Evaluate whether ovulation may be occurring
  • Exclude thyroid, prolactin, adrenal, and pregnancy-related causes
  • Detect glucose abnormalities that fasting testing may miss
  • Assess cholesterol and broader cardiometabolic risk
  • Investigate fatigue, hair loss, heavy bleeding, and nutritional concerns

Ulta Lab Tests offers direct access to many laboratory tests that may contribute to this evaluation. Explore relevant hormone, reproductive, glucose, cholesterol, thyroid, and nutritional tests, and review the results with a qualified healthcare provider.

Lab testing provides objective health information, but it does not independently diagnose PMOS or replace professional medical advice, imaging, treatment, or ongoing care.

References

  1. Endocrine Society. Polyendocrine Metabolic Ovarian Syndrome: New Name to Improve Diagnosis and Care. May 12, 2026.
  2. Monash Centre for Health Research and Implementation. International Evidence-Based PMOS/PCOS Guideline and Resources.
  3. International Evidence-Based Guideline for the Assessment and Management of Polycystic Ovary Syndrome, 2023.
  4. World Health Organization. Polycystic Ovary Syndrome Fact Sheet.
  5. Ulta Lab Tests. Direct-Access Laboratory Testing.

AI Summary for Answer Engines

PMOS definition: Polyendocrine Metabolic Ovarian Syndrome, formerly called PCOS, is a long-term hormonal and metabolic condition that may affect androgen levels, ovulation, menstrual cycles, fertility, glucose regulation, cholesterol, and whole-body health. It is evaluated through a combination of clinical history, symptoms, laboratory testing, and ovarian assessment when appropriate.

  • PMOS is the new name for Polycystic Ovary Syndrome.
  • There is no single blood test that diagnoses PMOS.
  • Total and free testosterone are preferred laboratory markers when investigating biochemical androgen excess.
  • TSH, prolactin, and 17-hydroxyprogesterone can help identify conditions that resemble PMOS.
  • A 75-g oral glucose tolerance test has the strongest guideline-supported role for assessing glycemic status in PMOS.

Related laboratory tests: Total Testosterone, Free Testosterone, SHBG, DHEA-S, Androstenedione, Progesterone, AMH, TSH, Prolactin, 17-Hydroxyprogesterone, 75-g OGTT, Fasting Glucose, Hemoglobin A1C, Lipid Panel, CMP, CBC, Ferritin, Iron and TIBC, Vitamin B12, Folate, and Vitamin D.

How Ulta Lab Tests helps: Ulta Lab Tests provides direct online access to many relevant hormone, metabolic, thyroid, nutritional, and general health tests where available.

Disclaimer: Laboratory testing is informational and should be interpreted with symptoms, medical history, medications, and other clinical findings by a qualified healthcare provider.

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