1. Calendar-period trends in cervical precancer and cancer diagnoses since the introduction of human papillomavirus and cytology co-testing into routine cervical cancer screening at Kaiser Permanente Northern California.
- Author
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Befano, Brian, Wentzensen, Nicolas, Lorey, Thomas, Poitras, Nancy, Cheung, Li C., Schiffman, Mark, Clarke, Megan A., Cohen, Camryn, Kinney, Walter, Locke, Alex, and Castle, Philip E.
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HUMAN papillomavirus , *CERVICAL intraepithelial neoplasia , *CERVICAL cancer diagnosis , *EARLY detection of cancer , *CERVICAL cancer , *CYTOLOGY - Abstract
The longer-term impact of introducing human papillomavirus (HPV) testing into routine cervical cancer screening on precancer and cancer rates by histologic type has not been well described. Calendar trends in diagnoses were examined using data from Kaiser Permanente Northern California, which introduced triennial HPV and cytology co-testing in 2003 for women aged ≥30 years. We examined trends in cervical precancer (cervical intraepithelial neoplasia grade 3 [CIN3] and adenocarcinoma in situ [AIS]) and cancer (squamous cell carcinoma [SCC] and adenocarcinoma [ADC]) diagnoses per 1000 screened during 2003–2018. We examined ratios of squamous vs. glandular diagnoses (SCC:ADC and CIN3:AIS). CIN3 and AIS diagnoses increased approximately 2% and 3% annually, respectively (p trend < 0.001 for both). While SCC diagnoses decreased by 5% per annually (p trend < 0.001), ADC diagnoses did not change. These patterns were generally observed within each age group (30–39, 40–49, and 50–64 years). ADC diagnoses per 1000 screened did not change even among those who underwent co-testing starting in 2003–2006. SCC:ADC decreased from approximately 2.5:1 in 2003–2006 to 1.3:1 in 2015–2018 while the CIN3:AIS remained relatively constant, ∼10:1. Since its introduction at KPNC, co-testing increased the detection of CIN3 over time, which likely caused a subsequent reduction of SCC. However, there has been no observed decrease in ADC. One possible explanation for lack of effectiveness against ADC is the underdiagnosis of AIS. Novel strategies to identify and treat women at high risk of ADC need to be developed and clinically validated. • Following the introduction of 3-yearly co-testing, the detection of CIN3 and AIS increased. • Following the introduction of 3-yearly HPV and Cytology co-testing, diagnoses of cervical squamous cell carcinoma decreased. • Following the introduction of 3-yearly HPV and Cytology co-testing, diagnoses of cervical adenocarcinoma did not change. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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