| Literature DB >> 23328247 |
Robert P Kauffman1, Stephen J Griffin, Jon D Lund, Paul E Tullar.
Abstract
The development of a screening test for cervical dysplasia has been a major force in diminishing the worldwide incidence of invasive cervical cancer. Screening intervals recommended by professional organizations have changed over the past half century. Recognition of the human papillomavirus (HPV) as the causative agent and enhanced understanding of the natural history of HPV and cervical dysplasia in different age groups have prompted the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists and other professional societies to defer Pap smear screening to intervals no less than 2 years apart in women 21-29, and every 3 years in women 30 and over assuming no prior history of cervical dysplasia. Screening should start no sooner than age 21. These recommendations more closely resemble those currently practiced in Europe and other parts of the developed world. Those who have undergone hysterectomy no longer need screening unless high-grade dysplasia was present. Although the value of pelvic examination is not debated in women with symptoms referable to the female genital tract, the endorsement by several professional societies of less than annual cervical cancer screening in healthy women also begs the question of whether annual pelvic examination (speculum and/or bimanual examination) benefits asymptomatic women. Some sexually transmitted infections are amenable to self-insertion of a vaginal probe or detectable by voided urine specimen. Bimanual examination is insensitive in detecting early ovarian cancer with a high false-positive rate leading to patient anxiety, excessive diagnostic testing, and unnecessary surgical procedures. Future study should focus on the frequency in which healthy asymptomatic women should undergo pelvic examination.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23328247 PMCID: PMC5586750 DOI: 10.1159/000346137
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Med Princ Pract ISSN: 1011-7571 Impact factor: 1.927
Comparison of screening intervals and strategies by selected professional societies over the years
| ACOG | ACS | ACS | ACOG | European Commission | ACOG | ACS/ASCCP/ASCP | USPSTF | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Initiation | 18 or after | 20 or after | 18 or after sexual | 21 or 3 years after | 20–30 (most countries | 21 | 21 | 21 |
| Pap | annual | every 3 years | annual until 3 consecutive satisfactory negatives, then at discretion of provider | annual until age 30, then every 2–3 years after 3 negative exams | every 3–5 years depending on resources | age 21–29 every 2 years; >age 30 every 3 years | every 3 years | every 3 years |
| Screening after HPV vaccination | not | not available | not available | not available | not available | continue | continue | not addressed |
| HPV s+ Pap cotesting | not | not available | no recommendation | acceptable after age 30, then every 3 years if negative | no recommendation | acceptable at age 30, then every 3 years if negative | preferred at age 30, then every 5 years if negative | acceptable at age 30, then every 5 years if negative |
| After total | every 3 years | every 3 years | no recommendation | stop unless CIN 2 or greater present | no recommendation | stop unless CIN 2 or greater present | stop unless CIN 2 or greater present | stop unless CIN 2 or greater present |
| Age to discontinue Pap cytology | not | 65 | no upper limit | inconclusive | 60–65 after 3 consecutive negative Paps | 65–70 after 3 negative Paps in past decade | 65 after following adequate negative prior screening | 65 after |
Recommendations for routine gynecologic examinations by selected professional societies over the years
| Organization | Year | Recommendation |
|---|---|---|
| ACOG [ | 1975 | annually |
| ACS [ | 1980 | age 20–40 every 3 years, then annually after 40 |
| ACS [ | 1988 | annually |
| ACS [ | 2002 | no recommendation |
| USPSTF [ | 2003 | no recommendation |
| ACOG [ | 2003 | annually |
| ACOG [ | 2009 | annually |
| ACOG [ | 2012 | annually, but could be deferred after shared decision making between physician and patient |