| Literature DB >> 28732037 |
Louise Sigfrid1, Georgina Murphy1, Victoria Haldane2, Fiona Leh Hoon Chuah2, Suan Ee Ong2, Francisco Cervero-Liceras2, Nicola Watt3, Alconada Alvaro4, Laura Otero-Garcia5,6, Dina Balabanova3, Sue Hogarth7, Will Maimaris3,8, Kent Buse9, Martin Mckee3, Peter Piot3, Pablo Perel3, Helena Legido-Quigley2,3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Cervical cancer is a major public health problem. Even though readily preventable, it is the fourth leading cause of death in women globally. Women living with HIV are at increased risk of invasive cervical cancer, highlighting the need for access to screening and treatment for this population. Integration of services has been proposed as an effective way of improving access to cervical cancer screening especially in areas of high HIV prevalence as well as lower resourced settings. This paper presents the results of a systematic review of programs integrating cervical cancer and HIV services globally, including feasibility, acceptability, clinical outcomes and facilitators for service delivery.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28732037 PMCID: PMC5521786 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0181156
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Type of integration and cervical cancer services provided.
The table shows the integration models described in the included studies.
| Integration model | CaCx Services | CaCx methods | Setting | Author and Country |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| VIA | HIV clinics | • Morgan 2014 | ||
| PAP | HIV / ID clinics | • Sirivongrangson 2007 | ||
| GUM clinic | • Ibrahim 2013 | |||
| VIA + Cryotherapy | HIV clinics | • Ekong 2013 | ||
| Family planning clinics | • Moon 2012 | |||
| Mobile HIV clinics | • Mulenga 2012 | |||
| VIA + Cryotherapy + LEEP | HIV clinics and RCH clinics | • Anderson 2015 | ||
| HIV clinics | • Huchko 2011 | |||
| VIA | HIV clinic and RCH clinic | • Odafe 2013 | ||
| ART and blood giving clinics | • Horo 2012 | |||
| PAP+ colposcopy | HIV/ID clinic | • Fink 2012 | ||
| VIA + Cryotherapy | Cervical Cancer Prevention Program clinics in HIV clinics | • Mwanahamuntu 2013 | ||
| Public health clinics | • Parham 2010 | |||
| PAP | HIV / ID clinics | • McCree-Hale 2011 | ||
| VIA + Cryotherapy | Family planning, and child and maternal health clinics | • Khozaim 2014 | ||
| VIA + Cryotherapy + LEEP | HIV clinics and/or Public health clinics | • Mungo 2013 |
^LEEP available in two of the 18 sites
^^LEEP available at some of the sites or by referral
*PAP and HPV testing
**VIA and VILI
***VIA and digital camera
CaCx: cervical cancer, VIA: visual inspection with acetic acid, PAP: Papanicolaou test, ID: infectious diseases, GUM: genitourinary medicine, LEEP: loop electrosurgical excision procedure, RCH: reproductive and child health.
Model 1—Within clinic integration using internal staff.
| Study | Study design | Setting | Model of care | Integration | Screening | HIV positive | Treatment coverage | Selection bias |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Morgan 2014 | Cross-sectional | The National Care and Treatment referral centre (NCTC), | Single-site approach: VIA screening | VIA provided as a baseline test for all HIV positive women and reinforced by NCTC health team, which also promotes annual VIA screening. Also extends to all women. | 1,831 | 49% | N/A | |
| Sirivongrangson 2007 | Cross-sectional | An urban infectious disease clinic and an STI clinic, | Screening: Pap test, HPV DNA test, and screening and treatment of STIs. Referral of those with abnormal cervical cytology. | HIV-infected women attending either an infectious disease clinic or a STI clinic were screened. | 150 (70.8%) at infectious disease clinic and 60 (100%) at the STI clinic. | 100% | N/A | |
| Ibrahim 2013 | Retrospective record review | A hospital genitourinary medicine department, | Screening using smear test and cytology. Referred for colposcopy according to local and national guidelines. | CaCx screening integrated into a genitourinary medicine clinic for HIV positive women. | 101 (78%) | 100% | Following the initial smear, all women were appropriately followed up with annual cytology or referred for colposcopy according to local and national guidelines. 22 patients were lost to follow-up after initial cytology. | N/A |
| Ekong 2013 | Retrospective record review | Five rural ART clinics, | ‘See and Treat’: VIA and cryotherapy, advanced cases referred. | Existing healthcare workers trained to provide CaCx services. | 1,088 | 19% | 53.6% (15/28) HIV-positive and VIA-positive women were treated with cryotherapy; 46.4% were referred. | N/A |
| Moon 2012 | Cross-sectional | Four rural family planning health facilities and one referral hospital, | ‘See and Treat’: VIA and cryotherapy, advanced cases referred. LEEP and surgery were provided at the provincial hospital for serious cases. | CaCx screening, family planning, HIV VCT, and STI and gynecological screening all performed during one visit in the same physical space. Technical assistance infrastructure of a HIV program used to introduce CaCx services. | 4,651 | 12.5% | 61% (221/380) of cryotherapy eligible women received same day treatment–increasing from 53% during the first quarter to 96% during the last quarter. | N/A |
| Mulenga 2012 | Cross-sectional | 14 Zambia Defense Force mobile HIV VCT service units, | ‘See and Treat’: VIA and cryotherapy, advanced cases referred. | Screening provided on an opt-out bases to women accessing mobile HIV VCT services. | 560 (67%) | 20% | 11% (62/560) were eligible for onsite cryotherapy and were treated immediately, while 5% (26/560) were referred, of these 92% (24/26) completed the referral. | N/A |
| Anderson 2015 | Cross-sectional | 24 HIV clinics and 23 reproductive and child health clinics in national, regional, and district hospitals, and health centers, | ‘See and Treat’: VIA and cryotherapy, ineligible referred for LEEP, advanced cases referred. | Existing healthcare workers trained to provide CaCx services. Shared training protocols and multiple types of staff involved. | 34,921 | 26% | 85% (2,508) of eligible women received cryotherapy during the same visit; only 234 (52%) of those who postponed returned for treatment; 622 (17%) VIA-positive women were referred for excisional treatment. | N/A |
| Martin 2014 | Retrospective record review | 18 CaCx prevention sites, including 10 HIV care and treatment sites, | ‘See and Treat’: VIA and cryotherapy, ineligible referred for LEEP, advanced cases referred, referred patients followed up. Counselling and education. | Physicians and non-physicians trained to provide CaCx screening services. Development of treatment guidelines with Ministry of Health and stakeholders. | 21,597 | 8% | 85% (1938) of women eligible for cryotherapy received immediate treatment. Of the 347 women who postponed cryotherapy, 62% returned for treatment, while 38% were lost to follow-up. Half (1,027) of VIA+ women treated with cryotherapy LEEP returned for a 1-year follow-up screening. | Unclear risk of bias |
| Huchko 2011 | Retrospective record review | District hospital and HIV clinics, | VIA and colposcopy, LEEP treatment, advanced cases referred. Outreach, awareness, and education campaign. | CaCx screening offered as part of routine care at HIV clinics. Full clinic involvement and training. Coordination with local experts and external pathologists. | 3,642 (87%) | 100% | 531 (15%) underwent colposcopy for either positive or unsatisfactory VIA; 243 LEEPs were performed. Eight women (0.1%) were referred for radiation therapy or surgery. | Unclear risk of bias |
Abbreviations: VIA: visual inspection with acetic acid, NA: not applicable, STI: sexually transmitted infection, HPV: human papilloma virus, CaCx: cervical cancer, LEEP: loop electrosurgical excision procedure, VCT: voluntary counselling and testing.
Types of outcomes reported.
| Type of model | Patient Outcomes | N | Process Outcomes | N |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Within clinic integration | Numbers offered CaCx screening | 9 | Proportion screened within 1 year of HIV diagnosis | 1 |
| Proportion accepting CaCx screening | 4 | Proportion followed up annually | 2 | |
| CaCx screening results | 9 | Number of staff trained | 3 | |
| Proportion offered cryotherapy | 6 | Loss to follow up | 5 | |
| Proportion referred for larger lesions and treatment | 6 | Screening uptake by type of clinic or region | 3 | |
| Proportion offered colposcopy | 3 | Proportion treated with cryotherapy same day | 3 | |
| Proportion taking up colposcopy | 1 | Complications/severe adverse events | 2 | |
| Pathology results | 3 | VIA positive rates over time | 1 | |
| Cancer diagnosis | 4 | Proportion of service providers offering screening over time by type of provider | 1 | |
| Reasons for declining CaCx screening | 1 | Proportion screened for CaCx versus national screening program over time | 1 | |
| CD4 counts | 2 | Staff satisfaction | 1 | |
| Proportion on HAART/ART | 1 | Provider barriers | 4 | |
| Proportion with STI | 3 | |||
| Perceived patient barriers | 2 | |||
| Proportion with high risk HPV infections/types of HPV | 1 | |||
| Coordination through colocation | Numbers offered CaCx screening | 5 | Loss to follow up | 2 |
| Proportion accepting CaCx screening | 1 | Proportion undergoing cryotherapy same day | 1 | |
| CaCx screening results | 5 | Proportion returned for follow up | 1 | |
| Proportion on HAART/ART | 2 | Probability model of program effectiveness | 1 | |
| Proportion referred for further CaCx diagnostics or treatment | 4 | Sensitivity and specificity of nurse screening assessment | 1 | |
| Patient barriers for uptake of support | 1 | |||
| CaCx pathology results | 3 | |||
| Cancer diagnosis | 2 | |||
| Proportion CaCx screen positive at follow up screening | 1 | |||
| Complex coordination | Numbers offered CaCx screening | 6 | Loss to follow up | 3 |
| Proportion accepting CaCx screening | 3 | Proportion diagnosed using Colposcopy vs. LEEP | 1 | |
| CaCx screening results | 5 | Probability model of number of cancer cases prevented | 1 | |
| Proportion taking up CaCx treatment | 1 | Numbers screened for HIV over time | 1 | |
| Proportion referred for CaCx diagnostics and treatment | 3 | Proportion followed up with repeat CaCx screening over time and outcomes | 1 | |
| Proportion referred for larger CaCx lesions and treatment | 1 | Hazard of recurrence of CaCx | 1 | |
| CaCx pathology results | 1 | Proportion followed up annually | 1 | |
| Cancer diagnosis | 3 | Proportions followed up | 1 | |
| Numbers offered HIV screening | 1 | Proportion accepting CaCx screening by type of clinic or region | 1 | |
| Proportion accepting HIV screening | 1 | Proportion treated with cryotherapy same day | 1 | |
| Reasons for not offering HIV screening | 1 | Numbers screened for CaCx over time | 1 | |
| Reasons for declining HIV screening | 1 | |||
| Complications | 1 | |||
| Patient barriers to uptake | 3 |
Abbreviations: ART: Antiretroviral Therapy, CaCx: cervical cancer, HAART: Highly Active Antiretroviral Therapy, LEEP: Loop Electrosurgical Excision Procedure, STI: sexually transmitted infections
N: The number of studies that reported this outcome, by model of integration
Model 2—Coordination between co-located clinics/specialists.
| Study | Study design | Setting | Model of care | Integration | Screening | HIV positive | Treatment coverage | Selection bias |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Odafe 2013 | Cross-sectional | Secondary healthcare urban public hospital, | All women attending ART were counselled on CaCx screening, those accepting were referred to the reproductive health unit for same-day VIA screening. Referred for colposcopy and treatment. | Coordination between ART unit and reproductive health unit with bi-directional referral and patient tracking system. | 834 (96.5%) | 100% | N/A | |
| Horo 2012 | Case -control with sub-cohort | Three ART clinics and a blood donor clinic, | Screening by mobile staff, referred for colposcopy if positive or inconclusive at ART clinic, follow-up and treatment at ART clinic. | Coordination between mobile staff and the ART clinic to provide screening and treatment for CaCx. | 4,046 | 74% | 414 referred for colposcopy, 36.5% (n = 151) did not attend. A systematic mobile phone tracking system reduced the loss to follow up from 36.5% to 19.8%. | N/A |
| Fink 2012 | Cross-sectional | A hospital HIV clinic, | Screening: Pap smear and colposcopy | New weekly specific clinic for women living with HIV; care provided by HIV and gynecological specialists. | 96 | 100% | N/A | |
| Mwanahamuntu 2013 | Cross-sectional | 17 clinics and an outpatient surgery care center housing a Gynecologic Cancer Prevention Clinic, | ‘See and Treat’: VIA and cryotherapy, refer cryotherapy-ineligible for evaluation and treatment to an outpatient surgery clinic located in a tertiary hospital. | Physical co-location of CaCx program clinics with HIV/AIDS clinics. | 56,427 | 26.7% | N/A | |
| Ramogola-Masire 2012 | Cross-sectional | Community and hospital-based HIV clinics, | “See and Treat”: VIA and EDI and cryotherapy. Cryotherapy ineligible referred for colposcopy/LEEP to local hospital. Complex lesions referred to specialized clinic, advanced cases referred to tertiary hospital. | Coordination between HIV clinic and CaCx screening community clinic in the same facility. | 2,175 | 100% | 253 received same-day cryotherapy. 575 were referred for further evaluation and treatment. 61.3% women received appropriate same-day screening and treatment without the need for recall or referral. | N/A |
| Parham 2010 | Cohort | 11 urban and four rural public health clinics, | “See and Treat”: VIA and cryotherapy, referred for histologic evaluation and clinical management. Follow-up visits for those undergoing cryotherapy or LEEP are encouraged at 6 weeks and 6 and 12 months. | Specialist nurses coordinate care independently in rooms co-located within 15 public health clinics. | 21,010 | 31.3% | Of the women eligible for ablative treatment by cryotherapy, 78% (1603/2061) actually underwent treatment. A total of 75% (1095/1462) of HIV-infected women referred for evaluation complied. Less than 20% of women ever returned for their recommended follow-up visit. | High |
Abbreviations: CaCx: cervical cancer, VIA: visual inspection with acetic acid, NA: not applicable, EDI: enhanced digital imaging, LEEP: loop electrosurgical excision procedure
Model 3—Complex program of integration and coordination described.
| Study | Study type | Setting | Model of care | Integration | Screening n (% of those offered) | HIV positive | Treatment coverage | Selection bias |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| McCree-Hale 2011 | Case series | Urban HIV clinics, | HIV clinics provide Pap smear screening, slides sent to lab in external hospital, follow-up and treatment at national cancer center. | CaCx screening integrated into HIV a clinics, using existing staff. Coordination with external center and lay health workers to ensure follow-up of care. | 1,440 | 100% | Of the 124 women with SIL, 5 (4%) presented for follow up and treatment at the national cancer center. The remaining 119 women had to be tracked using a district tracking mechanism comprised of trained lay health workers. | N/A |
| Khozaim 2014 | Retrospective descriptive study | Four regional HIV clinics and child-maternal clinics, | ‘See and Treat’: VIA and cryotherapy. Cryotherapy-ineligible evaluated by local gynecologists at mobile colposcopy service rotating once a month per site, biopsies evaluated at referral hospital and results reviewed by gynecologists at the clinics, referred for LEEP. | Integration of a public sector CaCx screening program into existing large HIV clinics. MoH working with NGO to train local staff and implement system of care across 4 regions. The collaboration provide logistic support, supply chain management, and screening rooms. | 6,787 | NA | 206 women underwent cryotherapy, 754 colposcopy, 143 LEEP, and 27 hysterectomy. The overall loss to follow-up was 31.5%: 27.9% were lost after a positive VIA screen, 49.3% between biopsy and LEEP, and 59.6% between biopsy and hysterectomy/ chemotherapy. | N/A |
| Plotkin 2014 | Cross-sectional | Government health facilities: The national consultant referral hospital, two regional hospitals, twelve district hospitals, and six health centers, | Integration of HIV testing within newly introduced CaCx screening and treatment services, located in the reproductive and child health (RCH) section of the facility. Coordinated referral between RCH and HIV CTC. Part of the Government National Strategy for CaCx prevention. | 24,966 for CaCx; 11,819 (94%) for HIV | NA | Low/unclear | ||
| Mungo 2013 | Retrospective record review- before and after study | Family AIDS Care and Education Services HIV clinic, | VIA and colposcopy, LEEP treatment, advanced cases referred. Women treated with LEEP were re-screened with colposcopy at 6, 12, and 24 months, and those with CIN 2, CIN 2/3, or stage IA1 disease during follow-up were offered repeat LEEP. | Addition of LEEP treatment to CaCx screening services at a HIV clinic. Coordination with external pathologist to interpret biopsies, in-clinic gynecologist for clinical staging, and external hospitals for treatment. | 4,308 | 100% | 100% (39/39) stage IA1 patients and 95.1% (39/41) of all women with ICC accessed treatment. | High |
| Pfaendler 2009 | Cross-sectional | 13 primary care clinics and a tertiary care hospital, | ‘See and Treat’: VIA and cryotherapy. Referral of patients for further evaluation: repeat VIA and punch biopsy or LEEP, with 6-week follow-up. Further referral as necessary. | Implementation of a referral and management system for cryotherapy-ineligible women needing further evaluation. HIV peer educators, HIV CTC staff, and nurses engaged in community awareness for CaCx screening among HIV-positive women. | 8,823 | 41.5% | 2,378 women were treated with cryotherapy and 1,477 were referred. 59.2% (875) of women referred kept their appointments. 748 women underwent LEEP. | N/A |
| Shiferaw 2016 | Cohort | 14 tertiary and secondary-level health facilities (5 allocated as Centers of Excellence), | ‘See and Treat’: VIA and cryotherapy, ineligible referred for LEEP at Centers of Excellence. Counselled to return for follow-up. | Integration of CaCx screening and treatment into the HIV and AIDS care and treatment package, establish provider teams throughout five regions, build capacity, and promoted community education and awareness. Coordinated referral and patient follow-up between ‘see and treat’ sites and Centers of Excellence. | 16,632 (99.4%) | 100% | 96.9% (1,481) of eligible women received cryotherapy on the same day as screening; 63.0% (80) of women referred for LEEP received treatment; 51.1% (614) of women expected to come for follow-up returned for screening 1 year later and were screened. | N/A |
Abbreviations: CaCx: cervical cancer, SIL: squamous intraepithelial lesion, VIA: visual inspection with acetic acid, LEEP: loop electrosurgical excision procedure, MoH: Ministry of Health, NGO: non-governmental organization, CTC: care and treatment centers, CIN: cervical intraepithelial neoplasia, NA: not applicable
Facilitators and barriers to integrated cervical cancer and HIV care.
The tables shows barriers and facilitators mentioned in the results or discussion.
| Facilitators | Barriers |
|---|---|
| Integration of the program within pre-existing healthcare infrastructures [ | Lack of staff and skilled staff [ |
| Task-shifting [ | Lack of pathologists [ |
| Evidence based cost-effective / low cost screening [ | Staff fatigue [ |
| Single visit approach (”see- and-treat”) [ | High staff turnover, [ |
| Qualified staff, certified nurses with some medical training [ | Loss to follow up [ |
| Care coordinator [ | Inconsistent supply of resources, incl. supplies and equipment [ |
| Staff willingness [ | Physical infrastructure [ |
| Training [ | Lack of medical records/electronic records [ |
| Train the trainer models [ | Long waiting times for results, delays in access to treatment [ |
| Continuous education and/or supervision [ | Limited treatment capacity [ |
| Screening algorithms and/or protocols [ | Lack of recall/follow up systems [ |
| Digital camera for training and quality improvement [ | Lack of financial incentives to providers [ |
| Capacity building for health care workers [ | Inconsistent quality between providers [ |
| Developing referral system [ | Failure to screen for HIV /missed opportunity [ |
| Bi-directional referral: HIV and reproductive health services [ | |
| Electronic medical records system [ | Treatment and transport cost [ |
| Phone-based tracking/call and recall system [ | Long time to wait for treatment[ |
| Renovation of facilities, appropriate screening rooms [ | Long transport [ |
| Stakeholder engagement, community participation [ | Lack of time [ |
| Health promotion targeting patients [ | Fear of cervical cancer diagnosis and treatment [ |
| Peer educators [ | Fear of HIV test results [ |
| Low transport costs [ |
Results of the studies evaluating integration.
| Study | Objective | Setting and sample size | Study design | Clinical & behavioral outcomes | Process outcomes | Risk of bias |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Huchko 2011 | To evaluate outcomes of cervical cancer screening within HIV care and treatment | District hospital and HIV clinics in western Kenya. n = 4,186 HIV+ women attending the clinics. | Cross-sectional | • Acceptability of screening: 87% (3642) of those offered accepted; 96% of whom accepted screening during the current visit. | • Reasons for declining screening included “needing to talk with their husband”, “being on their menses”, “needing to think about it”, and expressing fear of the speculum exam. | • Overall: unclear |
| Martin 2014 | To evaluate a cervical cancer prevention project in Guyana and to identify lessons learned to inform the improvement of cervical cancer prevention programs. | Cervical cancer prevention sites including HIV care and treatment sites and a hospital across 9 regions in Guyana. n = 21,597 women (HIV+ and HIV-) attending the sites. | RRR | • Wide coverage of screening: 95% (21,597) of HIV+ women enrolled in care and 17% of women aged 25–49 years in Guyana were screened. | • At study period end, 49 (69%) trained providers were still offering VIA, cryotherapy and/or LEEP services. | • Overall: Unclear, |
| Mungo 2013 | To evaluate the effect on treatment follow-up of offering LEEP in-clinic compare with by referral. | HIV clinic in western Kenya. N = 4,308 HIV+ women | RRR: Before and after study | • Increased access to treatment after addition of immediate LEEP in-clinic services | • When offered LEEP in-clinic or referral for the treatment of stage IA1 disease, all eligible women chose LEEP performed in-clinic at no cost. | • Overall: high |
| Parham 2010 | To analyse clinical outcomes and modelled program effectiveness among HIV-infected women by estimating the total number of CaCx deaths prevented through screening and treatment. | 11 urban and 4 rural public health clinics in Zambia. | Cohort | • One cervical cancer death prevented per 46 (corresponding range: 28–68) HIV-infected women screened by the program (142 prevented deaths among 6572 screened). | • Overall: high | |
| Plotkin 2014 | To provide a rough measure of the success of integration of HIV testing into cervical cancer screening, in order to inform scale-up of cervical cancer screening services in Tanzania. | 21 health facilities across 4 regions in Tanzania. | Cross-sectional | • Acceptability of testing: 94% (11,819) of those offered accepted HIV testing | • The proportion of clients offered HIV testing started out high (averaging 86% in 2011), and fell to 62% in 2012, and 55% in 2013. | • Overall: unclear/low |
Abbreviations: NA: not applicable, RRR: retrospective record review, CaCx: cervical cancer, diff misclas: differential misclassification, non-diff misclas: non-differential misclassification
1 Risk of bias assessed as a randomized control trial for whether there is a difference between referral-only (before) and in-clinic treatment (after)