| Literature DB >> 30572620 |
Andreas C Chrysostomou1, Dora C Stylianou2, Anastasia Constantinidou3, Leondios G Kostrikis4.
Abstract
Cervical cancer is the fourth most frequently occurring cancer in women around the world and can affect them during their reproductive years. Since the development of the Papanicolaou (Pap) test, screening has been essential in identifying cervical cancer at a treatable stage. With the identification of the human papillomavirus (HPV) as the causative agent of essentially all cervical cancer cases, HPV molecular screening tests and HPV vaccines for primary prevention against the virus have been developed. Accordingly, comparative studies were designed to assess the performance of cervical cancer screening methods in order to devise the best screening strategy possible. This review critically assesses the current cervical cancer screening methods as well as the implementation of HPV vaccination in Europe. The most recent European Guidelines and recommendations for organized population-based programs with HPV testing as the primary screening method are also presented. Lastly, the current landscape of cervical cancer screening programs is assessed for both European Union member states and some associated countries, in regard to the transition towards population-based screening programs with primary HPV testing.Entities:
Keywords: HPV test; HPV vaccination; cervical cancer; cervical cytology; human papillomavirus
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30572620 PMCID: PMC6315375 DOI: 10.3390/v10120729
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Viruses ISSN: 1999-4915 Impact factor: 5.048
Figure 1Management algorithm in primary HPV screening. Abnormal cytology refers to a borderline or more severe cytological result. This algorithm was developed based on “The supplements of the second edition of the European Guidelines for Quality Assurance in Cervical Cancer Screening of 2015” [55].
Data regarding cervical cancer screening and human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccination programs of European Union (E.U.) members and some E.U. associated countries.
| Countries | Presence and Type of Cervical Screening Program (Year of Initiation) | Screening Ages (Years) | Screening Interval (Years) | Primary Screening Test Used | Sample Taker | Use of HPV Testing | HPV Vaccine in the National Immunization Program (Year of Initiation) | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| ||||||||
|
| Opportunistic | 18+ or 2 years after sexual onset | 1 | CC | GYN, GPs | HPV testing funded in certain cases | 2014 | [ |
|
| Organized population-based, in some regions, roll-out ongoing, 2013 | 25–64 | 3 | CC & LBC | GYN, GPs | HPV triage testing | 2010: Flemish community, 2011: French community | [ |
|
| Opportunistic | N/A | N/A | N/A | GPs | N/A | - | [ |
|
| Organized population-based, roll-out ongoing, 2012 | 25–64 | 3 | CC | GYN | HPV triage testing, test for cure | 2016 | [ |
|
| Opportunistic | N/A | N/A | N/A | GYN | N/A | 2016 | [ |
|
| Organized population-based, roll-out ongoing, 2008 | 15+ | 1 | CC | GYN | HPV triage testing | 2012 | [ |
|
| Organized population-based, 2006 | 23–64 | 3 (ages: 23–59); 5 (ages: 60–64) | LBC (ages: 23–59); HPV test (ages: 60–64) | GYN, GPs | HPV primary testing performed for the ages 60–64, HPV triage testing, test for cure | 2009 | [ |
|
| Organized population-based, 2006 | 30–59 | 5 | CC | GYN, Midwives | Not in use | 2018 | [ |
|
| Organized population-based, 1963 | 25/30–60/65 | 5 | CC, HPV test | Midwives, Nurses | HPV primary testing in some regions, HPV triage testing | 2013 | [ |
|
| Transitioning to organized population-based planned for 2018, 1991 | 25–64 | 3 (CC), 5 (HPV test) | CC & LBC (ages: 25–64); HPV test (ages: 30–64) | GYN, GPs, Midwives | HPV primary testing in regional pilot projects, HPV triage testing | 2007 | [ |
|
| Transitioning to organized population-based planned for 2018, 1971 | 20+ | 1 | CC | GYN | HPV primary testing in implementation, HPV triage testing | 2007 | [ |
|
| Opportunistic | Sexual onset | 1 | CC | GYN, GPs | Not in use | 2008 | [ |
|
| Organized population-based, roll-out ongoing, 2003 | 25–65 | 3 | CC | GYN, Primary care personnel | Not in use | 2014 | [ |
|
| Organized population-based, roll-out ongoing, 2008 | 25–60 | 3 (ages: 25–44); 5 (ages: 45–60) | LBC | Various healthcare providers termed registered smear-takers | HPV triage testing, test for cure | 2010 | [ |
|
| Organized population-based, roll-out ongoing, 1989 | 25–64 | 3 (ages: 25–30/35); 5 (ages: 30/35–64) | CC & LBC (ages: 25–30/35); HPV test (ages: 30/34–64) | Midwives, Nurses | HPV primary testing in some regions, HPV triage testing, test for cure | 2008 | [ |
|
| Organized population-based, 2009 | 25–69 | 3 | CC | GYN, GPs | Not in use | 2010 | [ |
|
| Organized population-based, roll-out ongoing, 2004 | 25–59 | 3 | CC | GYN, GPs | Not in use | 2016 | [ |
|
| Opportunistic | 15+ | 1 | LBC | GYN, GPs | HPV triage testing | 2008 | [ |
|
| Organized population-based, (Piloting), 2015 | 25–35 | 3 | CC & HPV test | Doctors, Nurses | Cotesting | 2012 | [ |
|
| Organized population-based, 1970 | 30–64 | 5 | HPV test | GPs, Physicians, Clinicians, Midwives | HPV primary testing, HPV triage testing | 2010 | [ |
|
| Organized population-based, 2006 | 25–59 | 3 | CC (ages: 25–59); CC & HPV test (ages: 30–59) | GYN, Midwives | Regional pilot for Cotesting, HPV triage testing | - | [ |
|
| Organized population-based, in some regions, roll-out ongoing, 1990 | 25–59 | 3 | CC & LBC | GPs | Cotesting in some regions | 2008 | [ |
|
| Organized population-based, in some regions, roll-out ongoing, 2012 | 25–64 | 5 | CC & HPV test | GYN, GPs | Cotesting in some regions | - | [ |
|
| Transitioning to organized population-based, 2008 | 23–64 | Yearly x 2; then 3 yearly | CC | GYN | HPV triage testing | - | [ |
|
| Organized population-based, 2003 | 20–64 | Yearly x 2; then 3 yearly | CC | GYN | HPV triage testing, test of cure | 2009 | [ |
|
| Opportunistic | 25–65 | 3 | CC | GYN, Nurses, Midwives | HPV triage testing in some regions | 2007 | [ |
|
| Organized population-based, 1967 | 23–60 | 3 (ages: 23–50); 5 (ages: 51–60) | HPV test replacing CC & LBC | Midwives | HPV primary testing in some regions HPV triage testing, test for cure | 2012 | [ |
|
| Organized population-based, 1988 | 25–64 | 3 (ages: 25–49); 5 (ages: 50–64) | HPV test replacing LBC | GYN, GPs, Nurses, Midwives | HPV primary testing in implementation, HPV triage testing, test for cure | 2008 | [ |
|
| ||||||||
|
| Organized population-based, 1995 | 25–69 | 3 | CC & LBC, HPV test | GYN, GPs | Regional pilot for HPV primary testing, HPV triage testing | 2009 | [ |
|
| Opportunistic | 35–54 | 3 | LBC | GYN, Obstetricians | Not in use | 2013 | [ |
|
| Opportunistic | Sexual onset/21–70 | 2 (ages: Sexual onset/21–29); 3 (ages: 30–70) | CC & LBC | GYN, GPs | HPV triage testing | 2008 | [ |
|
| Organized population-based, roll-out ongoing, 2004 | 30–65 | 5 | HPV test, CC & LBC, | GYN, Doctors, Nurses | HPV primary testing | - | [ |
Conventional cytology; LBC = liquid-based cytology; GP = general practitioner; N/A = not available, GYN = gynecologists; “-” = HPV vaccine not in the national immunization program. 1 In Belgium an organized population-based program is in place only in the Flemish region [138]. 2 In Cyprus a regional pilot screening program was initiated in 2012, which is still in effect [152]. 3 In Finland, Italy, Portugal and Spain there is variation depending on the region. There are some regions in Spain that have population-based programs [92,175,184,220,251,269,278,312]. 4 In Greece, there are some regional cervical cancer screening programs that have been reported [206]. 5 In Romania an HPV vaccination program had started in 2008 but it was discontinued due to low uptake [256,257,259].
Figure 2The implementation status of HPV vaccination in E.U. member states and some E.U. associated countries as of 15 May 2018, based on the World Health Organization (WHO) “Vaccine in National Immunization Program Update”. Source: http://www.who.int/immunization/monitoring_surveillance/data/en/; assessed for the last time on 16 July 2018 [131]. The magnifying glass serves to enlarge the island of Malta.
Figure 3The implementation status of primary HPV testing in E.U. member states and some E.U. associated countries. The magnifying glass serves to enlarge the island of Malta. It is important to state that this is a rapidly changing field and that the status of implementation could not be confirmed for all countries from two independent sources.
Figure 4Health care providers that act as sample takers in cervical cancer screening programs in E.U. member states and some E.U. associated countries. The magnifying glass serves to enlarge the island of Malta. It is important to state that this is a rapidly changing field and that the status of implementation could not be confirmed from two independent sources and that this is a rapidly changing field. This figure was designed based on information available in Table 1 and Basu et al., 2017 [115].