Understand your PMOS risk — years before the average diagnosis.

PMOS (formerly PCOS) takes most women years to get diagnosed. Answer questions about your symptoms and cycle, and Veris turns them into a clinical screening summary, your probable phenotype, and the exact labs to ask for — so your first real conversation with a provider happens sooner.

10 minutes · No account needed · Results are yours to keep

4.3 years1

Average time from first symptoms to a PCOS/PMOS diagnosis.

Up to 70%2

Of women with PMOS are never diagnosed.

~5 million3

U.S. women of reproductive age are affected.

Sources
  1. 1.Sydora et al., BMC Women's Health (2023); Gibson-Helm et al., JCEM (2017)
  2. 2.World Health Organization, PCOS fact sheet (2023)
  3. 3.U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

How it works

Step 1

Answer questions about your symptoms

Cycle history, androgen symptoms, metabolic signals — about 10 minutes.

Step 2

Get your results

Your risk level, probable pattern, and what's driving it.

Step 3

Know your next step

A lab panel and a summary your provider can't ignore.

You may know it as PCOS. The science has caught up.

In 2026, international clinical consensus renamed PCOS to PMOS — same condition, more accurate name. The old name implied ovarian cysts were the defining feature, when it's actually driven by endocrine and metabolic dysfunction. Veris is built around that updated understanding.

I think I might have PMOS

For symptoms without a diagnosis.

  • Irregular cycles
  • Unwanted hair growth
  • Acne
  • Weight changes
  • Fatigue
Start the assessment

I've already been diagnosed

For ongoing support and tracking.

  • Understand your subtype
  • Track symptoms over time
  • Stay current on research
Create an account →

Common questions

Is this a diagnosis?
No. Veris is a decision-support and education tool, not a diagnostic one. It gives you a screening summary — your probable phenotype, a risk level, and the labs worth asking about — to bring to a qualified clinician, who is the one who makes any diagnosis.
What's the difference between PCOS and PMOS?
Same condition, new name — PCOS was renamed PMOS in 2026 via international consensus.
Do I need to create an account?
No. You can complete the assessment and see your results without one. An account saves them.
What do I do with my results?
Take it to your provider. The summary includes a clinical risk level, your probable pattern, and a specific lab list — which makes the conversation easier to have.
What if I already have a diagnosis?
Create an account for symptom tracking, research updates, and specialist connections.