| Literature DB >> 19640281 |
Ralph P Insinga1, Erik J Dasbach, Elamin H Elbasha.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Natural history models of human papillomavirus (HPV) infection and disease have been used in a number of policy evaluations of technologies to prevent and screen for HPV disease (e.g., cervical cancer, anogenital warts), sometimes with wide variation in values for epidemiologic and clinical inputs. The objectives of this study are to: (1) Provide an updated critical and systematic review of the evidence base to support epidemiologic and clinical modeling of key HPV disease-related parameters in the context of an HPV multi-type disease transmission model which we have applied within a U.S. population context; (2) Identify areas where additional studies are particularly needed.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2009 PMID: 19640281 PMCID: PMC2728100 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2334-9-119
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Infect Dis ISSN: 1471-2334 Impact factor: 3.090
Figure 1Overview of epidemiologic structure of multi-HPV type model. HPV infection may progress to either genital warts or cervical disease, with regression possible for HPV infection, CIN grades 1–3 and genital warts. Only cervical cancer confers an added risk of mortality, as depicted in the figure. However, in the full model (not shown for simplicity) all individuals face an underlying age and sex-specific mortality rate due to non-cervical cancer-related causes. CIN = Cervical Intraepithelial Neoplasia; HPV = Human Papillomavirus.
Figure 2Overview of clinical structure of multi-HPV typemodel. HPV infection may progress to either genital warts or cervical disease, with regression possible for HPV infection, CIN grades 1–3 and genital warts. Treated genital warts, CIN and cervical cancer may result in disease eradication with elimination of HPV infection, disease eradication with persistent HPV infection, or failure to eradicate disease or HPV infection. Once CIN is detected, women are followed with annual Pap screening. Women in all health states are also subject to an age-specific rate of hysterectomy for benign conditions (not shown for simplicity). CIN = Cervical Intraepithelial Neoplasia; HPV = Human Papillomavirus.
Description of Literature Search
| Category | Search terms | Articles Retrieved | Articles Selected for this Review |
|---|---|---|---|
| Duration and progression of cervical HPV infection and natural immunity | <human papillomavirus and cervical> OR <human papillomavirus and cervix> | 7,454 | 8 |
| Progression and regression of cervical intraepithelial neoplasia | <cervical intraepithelial neoplasia and progression> OR <CIN and progression> OR <cervical intraepithelial neoplasia and natural history> OR <CIN and natural history> OR <cervical intraepithelial neoplasia and regression> OR <CIN and regression> OR <cervical intraepithelial neoplasia and clearance> OR <CIN and clearance> | 1,321 | 5 |
| Natural history of cervical cancer | <cervical and cancer and natural history> OR <cervix and cancer and natural history> OR <cervical and cancer and progression> OR <cervix and cancer and progression> | 2,538 | 4 |
| Hysterectomy | <hysterectomy and rate and United States> | 270 | 1 |
| Cervical cytology screening | <Pap and rate and United States> OR <cervical and screening and rate and United States> OR <cervix and screening and rate and United States> OR <cervical and cytology and rate and United States> OR <cervix and cytology and rate and United States> | 848 | 3 |
| Cervical cytology sensitivity and specificity | For literature published up to October 1999 we consulted a prior systematic review: | 559 | 2 |
| Nanda K, McCrory DC, Myers ER, Bastian LA, Hasselblad V, Hickey JD, Matchar DB. Accuracy of the Papanicolaou test in screening for and follow-up of cervical cytologic abnormalities: a systematic review. Ann Intern Med. 2000 May 16;132(10):810–9. | |||
| For literature published from October 1999 forward we used search terms of: | |||
| <Pap and cervical intraepithelial neoplasia and sensitivity> OR <cytology and cervical intraepithelial neoplasia and sensitivity> OR <screening and cervical intraepithelial neoplasia and sensitivity> OR <Pap and cervical intraepithelial neoplasia and specificity> OR <cytology and cervical intraepithelial neoplasia and specificity> OR <screening and cervical intraepithelial neoplasia and specificity> OR <Pap and CIN and sensitivity> OR <cytology and CIN and sensitivity> OR <screening and CIN and sensitivity> OR <Pap and CIN and specificity> OR <cytology and CIN and specificity> OR <screening and CIN and specificity> | |||
| Symptom development for cervical cancer | <cervical and cancer and symptom> OR <cervix and cancer and symptom> | 255 | 0 |
| Eradication of disease with treatment | <cervical intraepithelial neoplasia and treatment and loop excision and recurrence> OR <cervical intraepithelial neoplasia and treatment and LEEP and recurrence> OR <cervical intraepithelial neoplasia and treatment and LLETZ and recurrence> OR <cervical intraepithelial neoplasia and treatment and loop excision and residual> OR <cervical intraepithelial neoplasia and treatment and LEEP and residual> OR <cervical intraepithelial neoplasia and treatment and LLETZ and residual> OR <cervical intraepithelial neoplasia and treatment and loop excision and failure> OR <cervical intraepithelial neoplasia and treatment and LEEP and failure> OR <cervical intraepithelial neoplasia and treatment and LLETZ and failure> OR <genital wart and treatment and recurrence> | 362 | 10 |
| HPV persistence following treatment | <human papillomavirus and treatment and persistence> OR <human papillomavirus and treatment and clearance> | 162 | 2 |
| Anogenital wart patients seeking physican care | <genital wart and untreated> OR <genital wart and undiagnosed> OR <genital wart and care seeking> | 36 | 0 |
Name of host: PubMed http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/sites/entrez
Dates of search: October 2005–January 2006
Years covered by search: 1950–2006
Language: English language literature
Complete search strategy used: Different search terms were used for various components of HPV infection and disease epidemiology and clinical management. These terms are summarized here by category.
Summary of Study Selection Criteria By Parameter Group
| Parameter Group | Study Selection Criteria |
|---|---|
| • Nationally representative studies meeting selection criteria | |
| ➢ If unavailable, then select broad population-based studies | |
| ▪ If unavailable, then select local studies | |
| • Specificity of results to HPV type groupings of interest (16/18 or 6/11) | |
| ➢ If studies specific to HPV 16/18 or 6/11 infection or disease are unavailable, then select studies of all high-risk or all low-risk HPV types, respectively | |
| ▪ If unavailable then select studies for all infections or disease | |
| • PCR-based methods for HPV detection in infections | |
| Progression of HPV infection and disease | • Histologic confirmation of cervical disease |
| • Data available for outcomes reported over a 12-month time horizon | |
| HPV infection mean duration in absence of detectable disease | • Specificity of results to HPV type groupings of interest (16/18 or 6/11) |
| • Truncation of infection duration at time of disease detection via histology | |
| • Limited degree of censoring beyond longest infection follow-up time | |
| Regression of HPV infection and disease | • Histologic confirmation of cervical disease at baseline |
| • Biopsy confirmation of cervical HPV-type specific disease absence during follow-up to connote regression | |
| ➢ If unavailable for all cases, then select studies with either biopsy confirmed HPV-type specific disease absence for a portion of cases, with negative cytology for non-biopsied cases, OR biopsy confirmed disease absence, irrespective of HPV-type | |
| • Data available for outcomes reported over a 12-month time horizon | |
| Cervical cancer mortality | • Data available on an age- and stage-specific basis |
| • Nationally representative or broad population-based studies in unscreened women | |
| ➢ If unavailable, then select nationally representative or broad population-based studies in screened and unscreened women | |
| • Data available for outcomes reported over a 12-month time horizon | |
| Hysterectomy for non-HPV related conditions | • Age-specific annual hysterectomy rates reported |
| Cytology screening rates | • Age-specific annual routine cervical cytology screening rates reported |
| ➢ Routine screening reported separately from follow-up screening | |
| ➢ Cervical cytology reported separately from vaginal cytology | |
| • Data based on documented screening utilization in a population-based study if available | |
| ➢ If unavailable, then select studies based on patient self-report | |
| Cytology sensitivity | • Liquid-based cytology evaluated |
| • Cervical biopsy performed on all women | |
| ➢ If unavailable, then select studies in which cervical biopsy was performed on at least a random sample of women with negative cytology and colposcopy results | |
| Cytology specificity | • Liquid-based cytology evaluated |
| • Cervical colposcopy performed on all women, with biopsy performed if abnormalities suspected | |
| • Biopsy results reported for all grades of cervical disease (≥ CIN 1) | |
| Colposcopy sensitivity/specificity | • Colposcopy performed following abnormal cytology |
| • Colposcopically directed cervical biopsy performed on all women | |
| • Biopsy results reported for all grades of cervical disease (≥ CIN 1) | |
| Symptom development among cancer patients | • Stage-specific symptom development |
| • Representative cross-section of patients with cervical cancer at each stage including patients who may harbor occult cancers | |
| ➢ If unavailable, then rely upon expert opinion from the literature | |
| Eradication of CIN with treatment | • Representative study of CIN therapies used in practice if available |
| ➢ If unavailable then select studies of LEEP (most common modality) | |
| • Stratified reporting of outcomes by pre-treatment CIN grade | |
| • Post-treatment follow-up of all women within 12 months via colposcopy and/or biopsy | |
| • Definition of recurrent or residual disease as CIN 1 or more severe histology | |
| Eradication of cervical cancer with treatment | • Nationally representative or broad population-based studies of 5-year disease-free survival by cancer stage |
| ➢ If unavailable, then select nationally representative or broad population-based studies of 5-year relative survival by cancer stage | |
| Eradication of genital warts with treatment | • Representative study of genital wart treatments used in clinical practice |
| • Physician ascertained clearance following treatment for all subjects | |
| Persistence of HPV following cervical disease eradication | • Representative study of therapies used in practice if available |
| ➢ If unavailable, then select studies of LEEP (most common modality) for CIN, and hysterectomy or radiation therapy for cervical cancer | |
| • Histologic confirmation of disease pre-treatment and post-treatment (for exclusionary study purposes) | |
| • HPV typing of pre- or post-treatment lesion tissue specimens or both | |
| ➢ If unavailable, then select studies with HPV typing of any cervical specimen | |
| • Follow-up for all women within 6 months post-treatment | |
| ➢ If unavailable, then select studies with less prompt follow-up | |
| • Colposcopy performed on all women post-treatment to assist in confirming disease eradication | |
| Persistence of HPV following genital wart eradication | • Representative study of genital wart treatments used in clinical practice |
| • Testing for HPV infection across a range of anogenital sites post-treatment (not just at the former wart site) | |
| • Follow-up for all women within 6 months post-treatment | |
| ➢ If unavailable, then select studies with less prompt follow-up | |
| Care seeking behavior for genital warts | • Population-based studies of patients with genital warts, including both those who have, and who have not, chosen to seek physician care |
| ➢ If unavailable, then rely upon expert opinion from the literature | |
CIN = Cervical intraepithelial neoplasia; HPV = Human papillomavirus; LEEP = loop electrosurgical excision procedure; PCR = Polymerase chain reaction
Epidemiologic Natural History Model Parameters
| Parameter | Estimate |
|---|---|
| Progression in the presence of HPV 16/18, % per year | |
| Normal to CIN1[ | 9.4 |
| Normal to CIN 1 to CIN 2 [ | 5.8 |
| Normal to CIN 1 to CIN 2 to CIN 3 [ | 3.5 |
| CIN1 to CIN 2* | 13.6 |
| CIN 2 to CIN3 (severe dysplasia) [ | 14.0 |
| CIN 3 (severe dysplasia) to CIN 3 (CIS) [ | 43.0 |
| CIN 3 (CIS) to LCC | 4.1 |
| LCC to RCC [ | 10.0 |
| RCC to DCC [ | 30.0 |
| Progression in the presence of HPV 6/11, % per year | |
| Normal to CIN1 [ | 8.5 |
| Normal to CIN 1 to CIN 2 [ | 1.9 |
| Normal to CIN 1 to CIN 2 to CIN 3 [ | 0.0 |
| CIN 1 to CIN2 * | 0.0 |
| Normal to genital warts [ | 57 |
| Mean HPV infection duration with CIN absent, years | |
| HPV 16/18 infection [ | 1.2 |
| HPV 6/11 infection [ | 0.7 |
| Duration of acquired immunity following HPV infection | 10 years to Lifelong |
| Regression of HPV 16/18+ disease, % per year | |
| CIN1 to Negative/HPV 16/18 [ | 32.9 |
| CIN 2 to Negative/HPV 16/18 [ | 21.0 |
| CIN 2 to CIN 1 [ | 13.3 |
| CIN 3 (severe dysplasia) to Negative/HPV 16/18 [ | 11.0 |
| CIN 3 (severe dysplasia) to CIN 1 [ | 3.0 |
| CIN 3 (severe dysplasia) to CIN 2 [ | 3.0 |
| Regression of HPV 6/11+ disease, % per year | |
| CIN1 to Negative/HPV 6/11* | 55.2 |
| Genital warts to Negative/HPV 6/11 [ | 87.5 |
| Age and stage-specific cervical cancer mortality, 1997–2002, % per year [ | |
| for LCC | |
| 15–29 years | 0.7 |
| 30–39 years | 0.6 |
| 40–49 years | 0.8 |
| 50–59 years | 1.9 |
| 60–69 years | 4.2 |
| ≥ 70 years | 11.6 |
| for RCC | |
| 15–29 years | 13.4 |
| 30–39 years | 8.9 |
| 40–49 years | 11.0 |
| 50–59 years | 10.1 |
| 60–69 years | 17.6 |
| ≥ 70 years | 28.6 |
| for DCC | |
| 15–29 years | 42.9 |
| 30–39 years | 41.0 |
| 40–49 years | 46.7 |
| 50–59 years | 52.7 |
| 60–69 years | 54.6 |
| ≥ 70 years | 70.3 |
CIN = cervical intraepithelial neoplasia; CIS = carcinoma in situ; DCC = distant cervical cancer; HPV = human papillomavirus; LCC = localized cervical cancer; RCC = regional cervical cancer
*R. Insinga, unpublished data.
Figure 3Annual Proportion of An Incident Cohort Progressing Under An Exponential Distribution. In this example, an incident cohort at year 0 progresses to a subsequent health state at an annual rate of 0.078, corresponding to a constant annual risk of 7.5%. This results in 7.5% (1*.075) of the original cohort progressing in year 1. By the start of year 10, 49.6% of the original cohort remains in the initial health state, and only 3.7% (.496*.075) progress during year 10. Regardless of the value for risk chosen, the absolute proportion progressing will be highest during year 1 and decline steadily with time. For simplicity, mortality and disease regression are not modeled here.
Figure 4Illustration of Normally Distributed Progression Over Time In An Incident Cohort. In this example, an identical average annual rate (0.078) and risk (7.5%) of progression over a 25 year period has been modeled as in figure 3. However, through a transformation, the absolute risk of progression over time has now been rendered normally distributed (with standard deviation of 6) with the largest proportion of individuals now progressing near year 13 rather than year 1.
Figure 5Incidence of CIN 2/3 Detected Through Screening and Cervical Cancer Incidence Prior to Screening. Rates are per 100,000 women undergoing routine cytologic screening for CIN 2/3, and per 100,000 women for cervical cancer. The peak incidence of invasive cervical cancer is observed approximately 25–30 years later than for CIN 2/3. Sources: CIN 2/3 incidence among screened women (Kaiser Permanente Northwest Health Plan, Portland, Oregon, 1998–2002) [73], Cervical cancer incidence among unscreened women (Connecticut, 1940–1944) [73].
Clinical diagnosis and treatment parameters
| Parameter | Parameter estimate |
|---|---|
| Hysterectomy for non-HPV-related conditions, % per year [ | |
| 15–24 years | 0.02 |
| 25–29 years | 0.26 |
| 30–34 years | 0.53 |
| 35–39 years | 0.89 |
| 40–44 years | 1.17 |
| 45–54 years | 0.99 |
| ≥ 55 years | 0.36 |
| Cervical cytology screening, % per year (excluding those with hysterectomy) [ | |
| 10–14 years | 0.6 (0.6) |
| 15–19 years | 21.0 (21.0) |
| 20–24 years | 44.6 (44.8) |
| 25–29 years | 60.4 (61.6) |
| 30–34 years | 52.4 (54.9) |
| 35–39 years | 46.0 (50.5) |
| 40–44 years | 41.0 (48.1) |
| 45–49 years | 39.1 (49.1) |
| 50–54 years | 38.0 (51.1) |
| 55–59 years | 33.2 (46.7) |
| 60–64 years | 29.4 (42.5) |
| 65–69 years | 26.2 (38.9) |
| 70–74 years | 19.4 (29.6) |
| 75–79 years | 12.9 (20.1) |
| 80–84 years | 7.0 (11.1) |
| 85+ | 3.4 (5.5) |
| Women never screened, % | 5.0 |
| Liquid-based cytology sensitivity, % | |
| for CIN 1 [ | 28 |
| for ≥ CIN 2/3 [ | 59 |
| Liquid-based cytology specificity, % [ | 94 |
| Colposcopy sensitivity, % [ | 96 |
| Colposcopy specificity, % [ | 48 |
| Symptom development, % per year | |
| for LCC | 4 |
| for RCC | 18 |
| for DCC | 90 |
| Eradication with treatment, % | |
| for CIN1 [ | 97 |
| for CIN2 [ | 93 |
| for CIN3 [ | 93 |
| for LCC [ | 92 |
| for RCC [ | 55 |
| for DCC [ | 17 |
| for anogenital warts [ | 87.5/year |
| Persistence of HPV following eradication of CIN, % [ | 34 |
| Persistence of HPV following eradication of cervical cancer, % [ | 47 |
| Persistence of HPV following eradication of genital warts | 34 |
| Anogenital wart patients seeking physician care, % [ | 75 |
CIN = cervical intraepithelial neoplasia; DCC = distant cervical cancer; HPV = human papillomavirus; LCC = localized cervical cancer; RCC = regional cervical cancer