PALM – COEIN

“There are 9 main categories, which are arranged according to the acronym PALM-COEIN. In general, the components of the PALM group are discrete (structural) entities that can be measured visually with imaging techniques and/or histopathology, whereas the COEIN group is related to entities that are not defined by imaging or histopathology (non-structural).” FIGO 2011.

Classification Disease type
Polyp Endometrial and endocervical polyps
Adenomyosis Adenomyosis
Leiomyoma (fibroids) Leiomyomas are also fibroids, uterine myomas, or fibromas. They are “firm, compact tumors that are made of smooth muscle cells and fibrous connective tissue that develop in the uterus.” obgyn.ucla.com
Malignancy, premalignancy/hyperplasia; Endometrial cancer,
Endometrial hyperplasia
Coagulopathy von Willebrand disease;
Bleeding in patients on anticoagulants.
Ovulatory dysfunction Anovulatory bleeding,
Endocrinopathies:
-Polycystic ovary syndrome,
-Hypothyroidism/thyroid disease
-Hyperprolactinemia,
Mental stress,
Obesity,
Anorexia,
Weight loss, or
Extreme exercise such as that associated with elite athletic training)
Endometrial. Endometritis / Endometrial infection, e.g. chlamydia
Normal variation. Endometrial bleed normal variations (postmenarchal, premenstrual spotting, postmenstrual spotting, midcycle ovulatory bleeding, perimenopausal)
Menorrhagia (idiopathic)
 Iatrogenic Contraceptive related abnormal bleeding (OCPs, depo-medroxyprogesterone, IUDs, progestin implants)
Drugs (anticoagulants, psychotropics, antibiotics like rifampin and Griseofulvin)
Cigarette smoking
 Not yet classified Organ failure (late manifestation: kidney failure, liver failure)
Ectopic pregnancy
Intrauterine pregnancy complication

PALM COEIN.

Reference / Further Reading
Int J Gynaecol Obstet. 2011 Apr;113(1):3-13. FIGO classification system (PALM-COEIN) for causes of abnormal uterine bleeding in nongravid women of reproductive age. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21345435.

FIGO 2011 article: http://sogc.com.ar/PALN-COEIN.pdf

http://obgyn.ucla.edu/fibroids, Last Accessed 3/27/2018

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