OBJECTIVE: New commercial HPV RNA assays require further validation studies in population-based cervical cancer screening settings. To assess the performance of (FDA-approved) APTIMA® HPV Assay (AHPV), Hybrid Capture 2 (HC2), in-house PCR genotyping, and ThinPrep LBC in population-based screening, stratified by three histological gold standards. STUDY DESIGN: A multi-center trial in 5006 women undergoing routine screening in France was designed to compare the absolute and relative risks of diagnosing CIN3+ and CIN2+ lesions by different diagnostic tests. RESULTS: Reproducibility between the primary and second pathology reading was excellent for CIN3+ and CIN2+ endpoints (Cohen's kappa 0.948 and 0.854). Absolute risks (PPV) of different tests (AHPV, HC2, PCR genotyping, LBC) in diagnosing CIN2+ (15-20%) and CIN3+ (4-6%) were similar for the first, second, and consensus pathology readings. The relative risks of diagnosing these lesions by the four tests were also similar when the first, second or third pathology readings were employed. AHPV had the highest absolute risk of both histological endpoints, and detects 5% to 15% more CIN3+ and CIN2+ lesions, respectively, than LBC. Compared with HC2 assay, the relative risk of AHPV is 24% to 29% higher, with a significant difference in CIN2+ detection. With LBC as reference, AHPV had the best sensitivity/specificity balance measured by AUC (area under ROC curve) comparison test (significant for CIN2+), and the colposcopy referral rate (9.2%) comparable to that of LBC (8.7%). CONCLUSIONS: These data corroborate the suitability of AHPV for the primary cervical cancer screening. Copyright Â
OBJECTIVE: New commercial HPV RNA assays require further validation studies in population-based cervical cancer screening settings. To assess the performance of (FDA-approved) APTIMA® HPV Assay (AHPV), Hybrid Capture 2 (HC2), in-house PCR genotyping, and ThinPrep LBC in population-based screening, stratified by three histological gold standards. STUDY DESIGN: A multi-center trial in 5006 women undergoing routine screening in France was designed to compare the absolute and relative risks of diagnosing CIN3+ and CIN2+ lesions by different diagnostic tests. RESULTS: Reproducibility between the primary and second pathology reading was excellent for CIN3+ and CIN2+ endpoints (Cohen's kappa 0.948 and 0.854). Absolute risks (PPV) of different tests (AHPV, HC2, PCR genotyping, LBC) in diagnosing CIN2+ (15-20%) and CIN3+ (4-6%) were similar for the first, second, and consensus pathology readings. The relative risks of diagnosing these lesions by the four tests were also similar when the first, second or third pathology readings were employed. AHPV had the highest absolute risk of both histological endpoints, and detects 5% to 15% more CIN3+ and CIN2+ lesions, respectively, than LBC. Compared with HC2 assay, the relative risk of AHPV is 24% to 29% higher, with a significant difference in CIN2+ detection. With LBC as reference, AHPV had the best sensitivity/specificity balance measured by AUC (area under ROC curve) comparison test (significant for CIN2+), and the colposcopy referral rate (9.2%) comparable to that of LBC (8.7%). CONCLUSIONS: These data corroborate the suitability of AHPV for the primary cervical cancer screening. Copyright Â
Authors: Paolo Giorgi Rossi; Simonetta Bisanzi; Elena Allia; Alessandra Mongia; Francesca Carozzi; Anna Gillio-Tos; Laura De Marco; Guglielmo Ronco; Daniela Gustinucci; Annarosa Del Mistro; Helena Frayle; Anna Iossa; Giulia Fantacci; Giampaolo Pompeo; Elena Cesarini; Simonetta Bulletti; Basilio Passamonti; Martina Rizzi; Maria Gabriella Penon; Alessandra Barca; Maria Benevolo Journal: J Clin Microbiol Date: 2017-01-18 Impact factor: 5.948
Authors: Thomas Iftner; Sven Becker; Klaus-Joachim Neis; Alejandra Castanon; Angelika Iftner; Barbara Holz; Annette Staebler; Melanie Henes; Katharina Rall; Juliane Haedicke; Claus Hann von Weyhern; Andreas Clad; Sara Brucker; Peter Sasieni Journal: J Clin Microbiol Date: 2015-05-27 Impact factor: 5.948
Authors: D A M Heideman; A T Hesselink; F J van Kemenade; T Iftner; J Berkhof; F Topal; D Agard; C J L M Meijer; P J F Snijders Journal: J Clin Microbiol Date: 2013-08-28 Impact factor: 5.948
Authors: Adhemar Longatto-Filho; Paulo Naud; Sophie Fm Derchain; Cecília Roteli-Martins; Sílvio Tatti; Luciano Serpa Hammes; Luis Otavio Sarian; Mojca Eržen; Margherita Branca; Jean Carlos de Matos; Renata Gontijo; Marina Y S Maeda; Temístocles Lima; Silvano Costa; Stina Syrjänen; Kari Syrjänen Journal: Virchows Arch Date: 2012-05-05 Impact factor: 4.064
Authors: Paolo Giorgi Rossi; Francesca Carozzi; Guglielmo Ronco; Elena Allia; Simonetta Bisanzi; Anna Gillio-Tos; Laura De Marco; Raffaella Rizzolo; Daniela Gustinucci; Annarosa Del Mistro; Helena Frayle; Massimo Confortini; Anna Iossa; Elena Cesarini; Simonetta Bulletti; Basilio Passamonti; Silvia Gori; Laura Toniolo; Alessandra Barca; Laura Bonvicini; Pamela Mancuso; Francesco Venturelli; Maria Benevolo Journal: J Natl Cancer Inst Date: 2021-03-01 Impact factor: 13.506
Authors: Derek C Johnson; Madhav P Bhatta; Jennifer S Smith; Mirjam-Colette Kempf; Thomas R Broker; Sten H Vermund; Eric Chamot; Shilu Aryal; Pema Lhaki; Sadeep Shrestha Journal: PLoS One Date: 2014-06-30 Impact factor: 3.240