| Literature DB >> 32507855 |
Maria Kyrgiou1,2, Marc Arbyn3, Christine Bergeron4, F Xavier Bosch5,6,7, Joakim Dillner8, Mark Jit9,10,11, Jane Kim12, Mario Poljak13, Pekka Nieminen14, Peter Sasieni15, Vesna Kesic16, Jack Cuzick17, Murat Gultekin18.
Abstract
This paper summarises the position of ESGO and EFC on cervical screening based on existing guidelines and opinions of a team of lead experts. HPV test is replacing cytology as this offers greater protection against cervical cancer and allows longer screening intervals. Only a dozen of HPV tests are considered as clinically validated for screening. The lower specificity of HPV test dictates the use of triage tests that can select women for colposcopy. Reflex cytology is currently the only well validated triage test; HPV genotyping and p16 immunostaining may be used in the future, although methylation assays and viral load also look promising. A summary of quality assurance benchmarks is provided, and the importance to audit the screening histories of women who developed cancer is noted as a key objective. HPV-based screening is more cost-effective than cytology or cotesting. HPV-based screening should continue in the post-vaccination era. Only a fraction of the female population is vaccinated, and this varies across countries. A major challenge will be to personalise screening frequency according to vaccination status. Still the most important factor for successful prevention by screening is high population coverage and organised screening. Screening with self-sampling to reach under-screened women is promising.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32507855 PMCID: PMC7434873 DOI: 10.1038/s41416-020-0920-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Br J Cancer ISSN: 0007-0920 Impact factor: 7.640
Summary of European Union Guidelines for Quality Assurance in Cervical Screening, completed with ESGO/EFC expert opinion.
| 1 | Screening needs to identify the target population that is to be screened. This is the basis of population-based programs and is usually done by obtaining a list of individuals from a population registry belonging to the target age range. EU guidelines accept starting screening in the range 20–29 years but do not recommend screening before 25 years. Screening of cohorts vaccinated against HPV can start later but currently no specific European-wide guidelines exist for vaccinated cohorts. |
| 2 | The target population that is due for screening should have a personalised invitation to screening. This is the basis of organised screening programs. In addition to the lists with the target population, lists with actually performed screening tests (from whom and when) should be obtained from the screening laboratories. In order to be able to provide a time, date and place for a personalised appointment, an organisation that can take the samples is also needed. Main Quality Indicator: Invitation coverage—number of women in the target population due for screening that receive a personalised invitation with specified time and place/all women in the target population due for screening |
| 3 | Women who do not attend their screening appointment should be sent a new personalised invitation next year. Main Quality Indicator: Renewed invitation coverage—number of non-attending women who receive a new annual invitation/All non-attending women. |
| 4 | Women who have not attended after repeated invitations could be sent an HPV self-sampling kit. Main Quality Indicators: Test coverage—number of women in the target population that are recommended to be screened that are actually screened in the recommended interval/all women in the target population that are recommended to be screened. Test coverage can be calculated for any given length of time. When monitoring the effect of repeat invitations and sending of self-sampling kits calculating test coverage at increased lengths such as 5-year or 10-year test coverage is useful. |
| 5 | Organised screening with HPV testing is recommended until the age of 65 years. Women who have had a negative screening test at age 65 can exit the program, whereas non-attenders still could receive invitations beyond the age of 65. There is no current agreement on the age of initiation of screening. |
| 7 | Double screening with both HPV and cytology is recommended against. Primary HPV testing outside of an organised programme is also recommended against. |
| 8 | Sending of self-sampling kits to the entire population (i.e. not only to non-attenders) is currently not recommended. |
| 9 | It is recommended to prolong the screening interval for HPV-negative women, to ensure that the annual proportion of the population that require gynaecological investigation is kept reasonably low (to save resources and avoid possible side effects). The interval can be prolonged. |
| 10 | Women who are HPV-positive in primary screening should be triaged with cytology. Women with abnormal cytology should be referred for gynaecological investigation. Direct referral to colposcopy of all HPV-positive women is recommended against. Main Quality Indicator: Proportion of women HPV-positive in primary screening who are cytology-positive and are referred/all women who are HPV-positive in primary screening. HPV-positive women with negative reflex cytology should have a new triage test some time later, which could be cytology or a hrHPV test. Other options can be considered. |
| 11 | In age groups where primary cytology screening is used (below 30 years), women with high-grade cytology or worse should be directly referred. Women with equivocal or mildly abnormal may have a reflex HPV-test and be referred to colposcopy if HPV-positive. Screening programs should monitor the results of the program and allow for incremental optimisations in the program: Repeat testing of women with inconclusive screening (e.g. HPV + /cytology−), referral policies and compliance to referral, results of triage tests, colposcopies, biopsies and treatment of precancers. The efficiency of the program should be continuously monitored to ensure optimal use of resources that results in a maximal protection against cervical cancer. Key factors to monitor are the proportion of screen-positive women (the prevalence of HPV infections), the number and cost of invitations, sampling, testing and repeat testing, colposcopies and CIN treatments, in the context of the observed reduction in the incidence of cervical cancers. |
| 12 | All laboratories performing cytology or HPV testing should be accredited and take part in an official quality assurance program. The screening program should audit cancer cases. |
| 13 | When purchasing HPV tests for primary screening, programs should only ask for HPV tests that have been clinically validated. |
Selected countries that have introduced primary HPV testing into cervical screening algorithms following economic and other evidence.
| Country | Evidence review body | Status | Old algorithm | New algorithm | Economic evidence | Projected effect of switch |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Australia | National Cervical Screening Programme | Introduced 2017 | 2-yearly cytology for 20–69-year-old women | 5-yearly primary HPV testing with partial genotyping for 25–69-year-old women | [ | Reduces cervical cancer incidence, mortality and costs by 31%, 36% and 19% in unvaccinated cohorts and 24%, 29% and 26% in vaccinated cohorts. |
| Netherlands | Dutch Health Council | Introduced 2017 | 3-yearly primary cytology for 30–60-year-old women | 5-yearly primary HPV testing for 30–60-year-old women. | [ | Prevents an additional 75 cervical cancer cases and 18 deaths a year without increasing costs. |
| UK | National Screening Committee | Pilot commenced in 2013, roll out by 2019 | 3-yearly cytology with HPV triage for 25–64-year-old women | 3-yearly primary HPV testing with reflex cytology triage for 25–64-year-old women, possibly with partial genotyping. This may be extended to every 5-years in the future. | [ | Reduces costs, cervical cancers and life years lost, but increases the number of colposcopies unless the interval between screens is lengthened. |
| Turkey | Ministry of Health, Turkey | Introduced in 2014 | 5-yearly cytology for 35–69-year-old women (low coverage) | 5-yearly primary HPV testing for 30–65-year-old women | [ | |
| Italy | Ministry of Heath, ONS (Osservatorio Nazionale screening) Gisci | Pilot started in 2013, roll out by 2018 on a regional basis | 3-yearly cytology for 25–65-year-old women | 5-yearly HPV testing for 30–65-year-old women | [ |