OBJECTIVE: Our objective was to evaluate a self-administered cervicovaginal irrigation apparatus (MY-PAP, Medtech, Bohemia, N.Y.) for the detection of cervicovaginal human papillomavirus infection. STUDY DESIGN: Twenty-five women referred to a colposcopy clinic because of a recent abnormal Papanicolaou smear were studied. Human papillomavirus infection test results detected by Southern blot hybridization and polymerase chain reaction from physician-administered and MY-PAP self-administered cervicovaginal lavage were paired for comparison. RESULTS: Seventeen (68%) patients returned home samples by mail a mean of 13 days after the clinic visit. All clinic samples and 16 of 17 (94%) home samples yielded adequate deoxyribonucleic acid for human papillomavirus infection analyses. Human papillomavirus infection was detected by polymerase chain reaction in 14 of 16 (88%) samples with complete concordance of viral detection in paired samples from the clinic and home. Southern blot detected human papillomavirus infection in 13 of 25 clinic samples (52%) and 7 of 16 home samples (44%), with concordance in 12 of 16 paired samples (75%). Specific viral type was the same in all positive paired samples (6/6). Concordance was high when the initial sample had a strong (2+ to 4+) human papillomavirus infection signal (5/6, 83%) or a negative result (5/6) or when a dysplastic (cervical intraepithelial neoplasia grade 1 to 3) lesion (9/11, 82%) was seen on cervical biopsy. CONCLUSION: Self-administered lavage represents an extremely promising technique for obtaining cervicovaginal lavage samples for human papillomavirus infection analyses.
OBJECTIVE: Our objective was to evaluate a self-administered cervicovaginal irrigation apparatus (MY-PAP, Medtech, Bohemia, N.Y.) for the detection of cervicovaginal human papillomavirus infection. STUDY DESIGN: Twenty-five women referred to a colposcopy clinic because of a recent abnormal Papanicolaou smear were studied. Human papillomavirus infection test results detected by Southern blot hybridization and polymerase chain reaction from physician-administered and MY-PAP self-administered cervicovaginal lavage were paired for comparison. RESULTS: Seventeen (68%) patients returned home samples by mail a mean of 13 days after the clinic visit. All clinic samples and 16 of 17 (94%) home samples yielded adequate deoxyribonucleic acid for human papillomavirus infection analyses. Human papillomavirus infection was detected by polymerase chain reaction in 14 of 16 (88%) samples with complete concordance of viral detection in paired samples from the clinic and home. Southern blot detected human papillomavirus infection in 13 of 25 clinic samples (52%) and 7 of 16 home samples (44%), with concordance in 12 of 16 paired samples (75%). Specific viral type was the same in all positive paired samples (6/6). Concordance was high when the initial sample had a strong (2+ to 4+) human papillomavirus infection signal (5/6, 83%) or a negative result (5/6) or when a dysplastic (cervical intraepithelial neoplasia grade 1 to 3) lesion (9/11, 82%) was seen on cervical biopsy. CONCLUSION: Self-administered lavage represents an extremely promising technique for obtaining cervicovaginal lavage samples for human papillomavirus infection analyses.
Authors: Akhila Balasubramanian; Shalini L Kulasingam; Atar Baer; James P Hughes; Evan R Myers; Constance Mao; Nancy B Kiviat; Laura A Koutsky Journal: J Low Genit Tract Dis Date: 2010-07 Impact factor: 1.925
Authors: M A E Nobbenhuis; T J M Helmerhorst; A J C van den Brule; L Rozendaal; L H Jaspars; F J Voorhorst; R H M Verheijen; C J L M Meijer Journal: J Clin Pathol Date: 2002-06 Impact factor: 3.411
Authors: K V Shah; R W Daniel; M K Tennant; N Shah; K T McKee; C A Gaydos; J C Gaydos; A Rompalo Journal: Sex Transm Infect Date: 2001-08 Impact factor: 3.519
Authors: G S Ogilvie; D M Patrick; M Schulzer; J W Sellors; M Petric; K Chambers; R White; J M FitzGerald Journal: Sex Transm Infect Date: 2005-06 Impact factor: 3.519
Authors: Isabel C Scarinci; Allison G Litton; Isabel C Garcés-Palacio; Edward E Partridge; Philip E Castle Journal: Womens Health Issues Date: 2013-02-12
Authors: J W Sellors; A T Lorincz; J B Mahony; I Mielzynska; A Lytwyn; P Roth; M Howard; S Chong; D Daya; W Chapman; M Chernesky Journal: CMAJ Date: 2000-09-05 Impact factor: 8.262