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Comparison of urine specimen collection times and testing fractions for the detection of high-risk human papillomavirus and high-grade cervical precancer

Authors :
Lisa Rahangdale
C.R.T. Vibat
Jennifer S. Smith
M.G. Erlander
A.C. Des Marais
V. Senkomago
Source :
Journal of Clinical Virology. 74:26-31
Publication Year :
2016
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2016.

Abstract

Background Urine testing for high-risk human papillomavirus (HR-HPV) detection could provide a non-invasive, simple method for cervical cancer screening. Objectives We examined whether HR-HPV detection is affected by urine collection time, portion of urine stream, or urine fraction tested, and assessed the performance of HR-HPV testing in urine for detection of cervical intraepithelial neoplasia grade II or worse (CIN2+). Study design A total of 37 female colposcopy clinic attendees, ≥30 years, provided three urine samples: “first void” urine collected at home, and “initial stream” and “mid-stream” urine samples collected at the clinic later in the day. Self- and physician-collected brush specimens were obtained at the same clinic visit. Colposcopy was performed and directed biopsies obtained if clinically indicated. For each urine sample, HR-HPV DNA testing was conducted for unfractionated, pellet, and supernatant fractions using the Trovagene test. HR-HPV mRNA testing was performed on brush specimens using the Aptima HPV assay. Results HR-HPV prevalence was similar in unfractionated and pellet fractions of all urine samples. For supernatant urine fractions, HR-HPV prevalence appeared lower in mid-stream urine (56.8%[40.8–72.7%]) than in initial stream urine (75.7%[61.9–89.5%]). Sensitivity of CIN2+ detection was identical for initial stream urine and physician-collected cervical specimen (89.9%[95%CI = 62.7–99.6%]), and similar to self-collected vaginal specimen (79.1%[48.1–96.6%]). Conclusion This is among the first studies to compare methodologies for collection and processing of urine for HR-HPV detection. HR-HPV prevalence was similar in first void and initial stream urine, and was highly sensitive for CIN2+ detection. Additional research in a larger and general screening population is needed.

Details

ISSN :
13866532
Volume :
74
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Clinical Virology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....df0f564b60f67a163e54dbd0382a8185
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jcv.2015.11.005