| Literature DB >> 28355365 |
Natalia Serrano Doratioto Faria Braz1, Noely Paula Cristina Lorenzi1, Isabel Cristina Esposito Sorpreso1, Lana Maria de Aguiar1, Edmund Chada Baracat1, José Maria Soares-Júnior1.
Abstract
Cervical cancer is a major cause of death in adult women. However, many women do not undergo cervical cancer screening for the following reasons: fear, shame, physical limitations, cultural or religious considerations and lack of access to health care services. Self-collected vaginal smears maybe an alternative means of including more women in cervical cancer screening programs. The objective of this systematic review was to evaluate the acceptability of vaginal smear self-collection for cervical cancer screening. We selected articles from PubMed, the Cochrane Library and Embase that were published between January 1995 and April 2016. Studies written in English, French, Italian, Portuguese or Spanish that involved women between 18 and 69 years of age who had engaged in sexual intercourse were included in this review. The review was performed in accordance with the PRISMA (Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses) statement. Nineteen studies were ultimately evaluated in this review. Most of the included studies (n=17) demonstrated that the self-collection method exhibited outstanding acceptability among women with respect to cervical cancer screening, and only two studies indicated that self-collection exhibited low acceptability among women in this context. The acceptability of self-collection was determined subjectively (without standardized questionnaires) in 10 studies (53%) and via structured and validated questionnaires in the remaining studies. The results of our review suggest that the self-collection method is well-accepted and may therefore encourage greater participation in cervical cancer screening programs. However, additional studies are required to verify these results.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28355365 PMCID: PMC5348584 DOI: 10.6061/clinics/2017(03)09
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clinics (Sao Paulo) ISSN: 1807-5932 Impact factor: 2.365

Databases and search strategies.

The algorithm used for this systematic review.
Studies included in the systematic review.
| Authors and publication year | Country | Age (years) | Type | Number of participants | Acceptability | Method used | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1) | Szarewski et al. ( | United Kingdom | 21 – 65 | Transversal | 28 | Low | Questionnaire |
| 2) | Mitchell et al. ( | Uganda | 30 – 65 | Transversal | 300 | High | Subjective |
| 3) | Szarewski et al. ( | United Kingdom | 29 – 65 | Randomized | 3000 | High | Questionnaire |
| 4) | Ortiz et al. ( | USA | 18 – 34 | Case-control | 100 | High | Questionnaire |
| 5) | Cerigo et al. ( | Canada | 18 – 69 | Case-control | 93 | High | Subjective |
| 6) | Quincy et al. ( | Nicaragua | 25 – 60 | Case-control | 250 | High | Subjective |
| 7) | Fielder et al. ( | USA | 18 – 69 | Randomized | 483 | High | Subjective |
| 8) | Penaranda et al. ( | Mexico | 30 – 65 | Transversal | 21 | High | Subjective |
| 9) | Sultana et al. ( | Australia | 30 – 69 | Randomized | 8000 | High | Questionnaire |
| 10) | Vanderpool et al. ( | USA | 30 – 64 | Transversal | 31 | High | Subjective |
| 11) | Racey et al. ( | Canada | 30 – 70 | Randomized | 818 | High | Questionnaire |
| 12) | Penaranda et al. ( | Mexico | 30 – 65 | Transversal | 110 | High | Subjective |
| 13) | Sultana et al. ( | Australia | 30 – 69 | Transversal | 35 | High | Subjective |
| 14) | Crofts et al. ( | Cameroon | 30 – 65 | Transversal | 450 | High | Questionnaire |
| 15) | Fargnoli et al. ( | Switzerland | 24 – 67 | Transversal | 125 | Low | Subjective |
| 16) | Sultana et al. ( | Australia | 30 – 69 | Transversal | 1521 | High | Questionnaire |
| 17) | Dareng et al. ( | Nigeria | 18 – 69 | Transversal | 600 | High | Questionnaire |
| 18) | Boggan et al. ( | Haiti | 25 – 65 | Case-control | 1845 | High | Subjective |
| 19) | Wong et al. ( | China | 35 – 65 | Randomized | 392 | High | Questionnaire |