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Low incidence of invasive cervical cancer among HIV-infected US women in a prevention program

Authors :
Kathryn Anastos
Sandra Melnick
Alexandra M. Levine
Pincas Bitterman
Howard Minkoff
Eric C. Seaberg
Nancy A. Hessol
D. Heather Watts
L. Stewart Massad
Sylvia Silver
Source :
AIDS (London, England). 18(1)
Publication Year :
2004

Abstract

Objective: To measure the incidence of invasive cervical cancer (ICC) in US women infected with HIV. Design: Multicenter prospective cohort study, conducted between October 1994, and September 2001. Setting: HIV research centers operating as six urban consortia in the Women's Interagency HIV Study. Subjects: A total of 2131 women (462 HIV seronegative, 1661 HIV seropositive, and eight seroconverters). Women with a history of hysterectomy or of cervical cancer at baseline evaluation were excluded. Intervention: Cervical cytology obtained at 6-month intervals, with a colposcopy referral threshold of atypia, followed by individualized treatment. Main outcome measure: ICC diagnoses obtained from study databases and regional cancer registries and confirmed by a gynecologic pathologist. Results: No incident ICC were observed in HIV seronegative women during 2375 woman-years of observation. During 8260 woman-years of observation, eight putative incident cases of cervical cancer were identified in HIV seropositive women, but only one was confirmed, yielding an incidence rate of 1.2/10 000 woman-years (95% confidence interval, 0.3-6.7/10 000 woman-years). The difference in incidence between HIV seropositive and seronegative women was not significant (P= 1.0). Conclusion: ICC is uncommon in HIV-infected US women participating in a regular prevention program.

Details

ISSN :
02699370
Volume :
18
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
AIDS (London, England)
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....d36a43edfd8fffc41d6c541a6984f3f3