1. Early detection of CIN3 and cervical cancer during long-term follow-up using HPV/Pap smear co-testing and risk-adapted follow-up in a locally organised screening programme
- Author
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Nina Buttmann-Schweiger, Karl Ulrich Petry, Martina Pietralla, Alexander Luyten, Axel Reinecke-Lüthge, Claudia Mauritz, Chris J.L.M. Meijer, and K Luyten
- Subjects
Gynecology ,Colposcopy ,Cervical cancer ,Cancer Research ,medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Obstetrics ,Incidence (epidemiology) ,HPV infection ,Cancer ,medicine.disease ,Cervical intraepithelial neoplasia ,female genital diseases and pregnancy complications ,Confidence interval ,Exact test ,Oncology ,medicine ,business - Abstract
We evaluated compliance with human papillomavirus (HPV) testing and risk-adapted patient pathways and monitored changes in high-grade cervical disease during long-term follow-up. Women aged >30 years attending routine screening for cervical cancer were managed according to results from first-round screening tests (cytology and high-risk HPV; Hybrid Capture 2). Between February 2006 and January 2011, 19,795 of 19,947 women agreed to participate, of whom 4,067 proceeded to a second screening round 5 years after recruitment. Predefined endpoints were compliance, grade 3 cervical intraepithelial neoplasia or cancer (CIN3+), new HPV infection, HPV persistence and abnormal smears in round 2. A total of 765 of 19,795 women (3.9%) in round 1 and 41 of 4,067 (1.0%) in round 2 were referred for colposcopy. Compliance rates with colposcopy were 93.1 and 92.7%, respectively, while histological assessment was performed in 680 of 712 (95.5%) and 36 of 38 (94.7%), respectively. CIN3+ rates were 172 of 19,795 (0.87%; 95% confidence intervals: 0.7-1.0) in round 1 and 2 of 4,064 (0.05%; 95% confidence intervals: 0.006-0.2) in round 2; the difference was statistically significant (Fisher's exact test, p
- Published
- 2014
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