| Literature DB >> 28645254 |
Sari L Reisner1,2,3,4, Madeline B Deutsch5,6, Sarah M Peitzmeier7,8, Jaclyn M White Hughto7,9, Timothy Cavanaugh7, Dana J Pardee7, Sarah McLean7, Elliot J Marrow7, Matthew J Mimiaga7,10,11,12, Lori Panther13, Marcy Gelman7, Jamison Green14, Jennifer Potter15,7,13.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Cervical cancer, nearly all cases of which are caused by one of several high-risk strains of the human papillomavirus (hr-HPV), leads to significant morbidity and mortality in individuals with a cervix. Trans masculine (TM) individuals were born with female reproductive organs and identify as male, man, transgender man, or another diverse gender identity different from their female assigned sex at birth. Routine preventive sexual health screening of TM patients is recommended, including screening for cervical cancer and other sexually transmitted infections (STIs); however, as many as one in three TM patients are not up-to-date per recommended U.S. GUIDELINES: Among cisgender (non-transgender) women, self-swab hr.-HPV DNA testing as a primary cervical cancer screening method and self-swab specimen collection for other STIs have high levels of acceptability. No study has yet been conducted to compare the performance and acceptability of self- and provider-collected swabs for hr.-HPV DNA testing and other STIs in TM patients.Entities:
Keywords: Cervical cancer; Female-to-male; HPV; Prevention; Screening; Sexually transmitted infections (STIs); Testing; Transgender
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28645254 PMCID: PMC5481878 DOI: 10.1186/s12879-017-2539-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Infect Dis ISSN: 1471-2334 Impact factor: 3.090
Fig. 1Diagram of study visit flow
Information queried via quantitative assessment
| Section Topic Area | Specific Content |
|---|---|
| Socio-demographics | Age; Race/Ethnicity; Education; Employment status; Income; Relationship status; Children; Housing stability; Zip code; Cross streets |
| Transgender History & Gender Affirmation | Sex assigned at birth; Gender identity; Pronouns; Childhood gender behavior/feelings; Ages of transgender first awareness, gender affirmation, disclosure; Legal gender affirmation status (i.e., legal documents); Internalized stigma; Physical gender affirmation status (i.e., binding, testosterone, surgery); Access to gender-affirming care |
| General Healthcare Access (for routine care not related to transition) | Insurance; Barriers to accessing care; Healthcare satisfaction; Healthcare avoidance; Experiences of discrimination in healthcare; Anticipated stigma in healthcare |
| General Sexual Health | Age of menarche; Gender(s) of sexual partners (lifetime); Age at first intercourse; History of contraception, pregnancy, and childbirth; Parenting desires; Beliefs about cervical Pap tests; Pap testing history; HPV vaccine and testing history; HPV risk beliefs; HIV testing history; PrEP knowledge and use; STI testing, diagnosis, treatment, and partner notification history; Libido and sexual satisfaction; STI knowledge and beliefs; Anticipated acceptability of and comfort with self- and provider-collection methods |
| Sexual Risk Activity | Sexual orientation; Gender(s) of sexual partners (past 36 months); Unprotected sexual contact (past 36 months); Partner-level sexual activity (3 most recent partners in past 12 months) ➔ Gender of partner; Relationship type; Sexual activities (e.g., oral-genital performed/received, receptive and/or insertive vaginal or anal sex) and barrier use frequency; Partner HIV/STI status |
| Trauma, Victimization & Resilience | Childhood abuse/trauma (prior to 18 years of age); Adult abuse/trauma; Intimate Partner Violence (lifetime and past 12 months); Victimization and attribution; Physical symptoms due to victimization; Stress recovery/Resilience; Social support |
| Mental Health & Substance Use | Mental health treatment (lifetime and current); Depression (CESD-10); Anxiety (BSI-18); Self- and community-acceptance; Suicide attempts (lifetime and past 12 months); Non-lethal self-injury (lifetime and past 12 months); Alcohol, tobacco, and other drug use (past 6 months) |
| Other | Cancer history (self and family); BMI; Weight description; Weight management; Body consciousness; Nutrition; Exercise |
Specimens collected during the one-time clinical visit
| Self-Collected | (2) Vaginal swabs | 1. Vaginal HPV |
| (1) Rectal swab | 1. Rectal GC/CT | |
| Provider Collected | (1) Pharyngeal swab | 1. Pharyngeal GC/CT |
| (4) Vaginal swabs | 1. Vaginal HPV | |
| (1) Cervical swab | 1. Cervical cytology and HPV specimen (Pap) |
Collection materials and analysis of self-collected specimens
| Specimen | Collection Materials | Lab Analysis (Quest Diagnostics) |
|---|---|---|
| Vaginal HPV DNA | Polyester Swab (Puritan) | DNA Hybridization Assay via Digene probe (HPV Types 16, 18, 31, 33, 35, 39, 45, 51, 52, 56, 58, 59, 68) |
| Vaginal GC/CT | Aptima Unisex Swab Specimen Collection Kit for Female Endocervical and Male Urethral Swab Specimens | |
| Rectal GC/CT | Aptima Unisex Swab Specimen Collection Kit for Female Endocervical and Male Urethral Swab Specimens |
Additional supplies provided to each participant: Hand mirror, latex gloves, written self-collection instructions
Collection kits for each specimen were color coded and numbered to match to the respective instruction sheet and to mitigate errors in sample packaging
Collection materials and analysis of provider-collected specimens
| Specimen | Collection Materials | Lab Analysis (Quest Diagnostics) |
|---|---|---|
| Pharyngeal GC | Aptima Unisex Swab Specimen Collection Kit for Female Endocervical and Male Urethral Swab Specimens | |
| Vaginal GC/CT | Aptima Unisex Swab Specimen Collection Kit for Female Endocervical and Male Urethral Swab Specimens | |
| Vaginal Trichomonisas | OSOM Trichomonas Rapid Test Kit, Sterile Swab | |
| Vaginal BV | OSOM Bvblue Rapid Test Kit, Sterile Swab | |
| Vaginal HPV DNA | Polyester Swab (Puritan) | DNA Hybridization Assay via Digene probe (HPV Types 16, 18, 31, 33, 35, 39, 45, 51, 52, 56, 58, 59, 68) |
| Cervical HPV DNA/mRNA & Cytology | Medscand® Pap-Perfect® Spatula and Cytobrush Plus (Cooper Surgical) |
For collection of all vaginal samples: Welch-Allyn speculum, halogen plug-in speculum light, water-soluble lubricant, large cotton swab to remove excess lubricant at time of speculum removal