| Literature DB >> 29959268 |
Shannon L Silkensen1, Mark Schiffman2, Vikrant Sahasrabuddhe3, John S Flanigan4.
Abstract
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29959268 PMCID: PMC6024629 DOI: 10.9745/GHSP-D-18-00206
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Glob Health Sci Pract ISSN: 2169-575X
FIGURE 1Deaths From Childbirth and Cervical Cancer, 2000–2015
Source: IHME (2016).
FIGURE 2Long-Time Course of Progression From HPV Infection to Cancer
Abbreviation: HPV, human papillomavirus.
Source: Schiffman (2011).
VIA Strengths and Limitations
| VIA Strengths | VIA Limitations |
|---|---|
| Affordable; low per-capita screening costs | High inter-operator variability |
| Point-of-care results; treatment or referral decisions can be taken in the same visit | Problematic sensitivity, especially for older women with endocervical lesions |
| Useful for downstaging of cancers in previously unscreened women | Need for investments in high-intensity quality assurance efforts |
Abbreviation: VIA, visual inspection with acetic acid.
HPV Testing Strengths and Limitations
| HPV Testing Strengths | HPV Testing Limitations |
|---|---|
| Point-of-care testing or centralized testing, dependent on testing platform and local needs | Majority of HPV infections (especially in young women) are transientand clinically non-significant |
| Simplicity and potential scalability of self-collection of samples | Lack of specificity for precancer |
| Reproducible results; not rater-dependent | Higher per-capita tests costs than VIA |
| Economical due to longer screening intervals possible for HPV-negative women |
Abbreviations: HPV, human papillomavirus; VIA, visual inspection with acetic acid.