| Literature DB >> 33000170 |
Helen I Anyasi1, Anna M Foss2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: A modelling analysis carried out in 2014 suggested that, without cervical cancer screening programmes, the incidence of cervical cancer in Denmark, Finland, Norway and Sweden would have been as high as that in some low- and middle-income countries. We compare programme strategies between Nigeria and these Nordic countries and develop translatable recommendations.Entities:
Keywords: Nigeria; Scandinavian and Nordic countries; cervical cancer; prevention and control; public health systems research; review
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33000170 PMCID: PMC8253993 DOI: 10.1093/inthealth/ihaa062
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int Health ISSN: 1876-3405 Impact factor: 2.473
Figure 1.PRISMA23 diagram.
Summary of study characteristics for articles/reports included in the review
| Authors | Study characteristics | Outcomes reported by authors | Authors’ conclusions |
|---|---|---|---|
| Journal articles in Nigerian settings (including reviews) | |||
| Bassey et al (2008) | Descriptive study | Poor uptake of services | There are no organised cervical cancer screening programmes although there are facilities for cytology in some Nigerian hospitals, which serve a limited number of women |
| Chukwuali et al (2003) | Descriptive study | Poor uptake of services: only 815 women participated in the highly subsidised screening service in Enugu over a 10-y period | Due to reasons such as poor awareness and sociocultural barriers, subsidised cervical cancer screening was not adequately utilised |
| Adepoju et al (2016) | Descriptive study | Challenges to accessing cervical cancer screening: disparity of location in favour of urban tertiary facilities, low risk perception and logistical issues in rural areas | Since most participants were urban-based, there is need to decentralise cancer of cervix screening through mobile clinics and establishment of screening centres in the rural areas |
| Obi et al (2007) | Descriptive study | Poor participation as <1% (932 women) of target population participated | It was not enough to provide cervical cancer screening services but there is a need to follow up these services by sustained awareness campaigns and motivation of healthcare providers to offer appropriate information to patients |
| Nnadi et al (2016) | Descriptive study | Participation was extremely poor compared with similar studies conducted in other parts of the country. Indication for cervical screening was mostly symptom-based referrals from facilities without screening services within and outside the state | Only through formulation and implementation of an organised national screening programme (while maximising opportunistic screening in the interim) can screening be performed more effectively and efficiently |
| Okeke et al (2012) | Randomized experimental study | Barriers to access include distance and travel costs; women who were randomly selected to receive the conditional cancer treatment subsidy were about 4% more likely to accept cervical cancer screening | The optimal set of subsidies should include treatment subsidies (if the client is screened positive) in addition to screening price subsidies |
| Alfonzo et al (2016) | Population-based randomized controlled trial | Participation was not affected by the absence or presence of a fee | Other strategies could be employed in socially disadvantaged urban districts as abolishing fees did not increase attendance in the short term |
| Journal articles in Nordic settings (including reviews) | |||
| Jensen et al | Cluster randomized controlled trial | Improved participation and improved coverage when women were targeted with invitations and enhancement of GPs’ attention to cervical cancer programmes in Denmark | Using a special targeted invitation to non-attendees combined with increasing GPs’ attention to the programmes could improve women's participation and increase coverage of cervical cancer screening |
| Elfstrom et al (2016) | Population-based descriptive study | Analysing key quality indicators formed the basis for quality improvement of the organised cervical screening programmes in Sweden | Regular registry-based monitoring and evaluation of quality indicators can provide an evidence base for prioritisation of improvement strategies |
| Vaccarella et al (2016) | Cohort study | In the absence of screening, incidence rates for 2006–2010 in Nordic countries would have been fivefold higher than observed rates | The organised screening programs in these four Nordic countries have resulted in the low incidence of cervical cancer |
| Dillner (2000) | Review article | Cervical cancer screening in Sweden is heterogeneous in quality, i.e. some counties practise organised screening and others are opportunistic | More studies need to be conducted to assess the effect of organised screening vs spontaneous screening on cervical cancer mortality |
| Hortlund et al (2018) | Research article | 2278 000 cervical samples collected in Sweden in 2014–2016 with 69% coming from the organised screening programme. Screening coverage was 82% (an average of 71–92% within counties); cervical cancer showed an increasing trend | Key quality indicators such as population coverage and follow-up rates were stable or improving, but nevertheless there was a cervical cancer increase suggesting that current efforts for measuring and reporting quality indicators are insufficient |
| Anttila et al (2000) | Review article | Incidence of cervical cancer has decreased in Finland and this is attributed to organised screening activities | The 30-y-old organised screening programmes have resulted in a decrease of >70% cervical cancer incidence and a reduction in cervical cancer mortality |
| Nygård et al | Review article | The Norwegian coordinated programme introduced in 1995 collected a total of 4744 967 pap smears from >1.4 million women aged 25–69 y recommended to have a conventional pap smear every 3 y | The screening programme provides a low-cost way to increase coverage as the number of women who had a pap smear was higher after implementation of the coordinated programme of women aged 23–59 y |
| Bigaard et al (2000) | Review article | Danish screening programmes had good coverage as a total of 650 000 smears were taken annually, which corresponds to screening of all Danish women aged 25–59 y on average every second year, even although the guidelines recommend screening every third year. There was a decrease in incidence from 15.3 per 100 000 women during 1987–1992 to 12.9 per 100 000 women during 1993–1995 | Organised screening has a better preventive effect than opportunistic screening; they recommend a move towards a longer screening interval than the 3-y interval currently practised |
| Grey literature | |||
| WHO (2012) | Project report | Observation of poor uptake and coverage in Nigeria | There is a need for effective monitoring and evaluation system to track key performance indicators such as coverage and incidence |
| Ponti et al (2017) | Meeting report | The Finnish programme has proven to be very effective in reducing the incidence of and mortality from cervical cancer | The Finnish cervical cancer screening programme is an example of a cost-effective way to run an organised programme |
Information on the four Nordic countries programme implementation culled from the 2017 WHO EU Meeting Report and Vaccarella et al. (2014) study
| General information | Programme organisation | Programme monitoring and quality assurance | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Country | Description of national screening activities | Target age (y) | Screening interval (y) | Screening activities | Is there a national screening policy documented as a law or an official recommendation? | Is there a team responsible for implementing the policy? | Are the screening tests provided free of charge? | Does the programme issue individual invitations through the screening registries? | Is there a team responsible for quality assurance? | Are screening data collected, linked to screening registries with programme performance reports published? |
| Finland | 1963 | 30–641 | 5 | National, population-based | OR | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ |
| Sweden | 1967 | 23–60 | 3 (23–50); 5 (51–60) | National, population-based | OR | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ |
| Norway | 1995 | 25–69 | 3 | National, combination of opportunistic and organised activities | OR | ✓ | ✗ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ |
| Denmark | 1967 | 23–59 (HPV test: 60–65) | 3 (23–59); 5 (60–64) | Regional until 1996; now national and population-based | OR | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ |
✗ = NO;
✓ = YES;
1Some municipalities target women below 30 years and above 60 years
3OR=Official recommendation
Description of targeted interventions across three countries
| Country; paper | Intervention | Findings |
|---|---|---|
| Sweden; Alfonzo (2016) | Women who were to be invited for screening were randomised 1:1, to receive an invitation either stating that the test was free (intervention group) or that it cost 100 SEK (control group) | Researchers discovered no significant differences between women who were charged and those offered free screening (RR 0.93; 95% CI 0.85 to 1.02). There were also no variances within the districts, age and attendance after the most recent previous invitation or previous experience of smear-taking |
| Denmark; Jensen (2009) | Normal letter at 3 y intervals to all women + a specific targeted letter to non-attendees + GP received visit by facilitators/advocates | The decline in non-attendees was 0.87% after 9 mo in favour of the intervention. A difference of 0.94% in the change of coverage rate was observed at 6 mo, which increased to 1.97% at 9 mo in favour of the intervention |
| Nigeria; Okeke (2013) | 1. Scratch cards offered to women to provide screening at N0, N50 (US$0.33) and N100 (US$0.66) | Women who were randomly selected to receive the conditional cancer treatment subsidy were about 4% more likely to accept cervical cancer screening |
| 2. Lottery tickets for treatment subsidies | ||
| Nigeria; Obi (2007) | The intervention was described as a ‘highly subsidised’ screening programme in Enugu. The nature of the subsidy was not described | Authors report poor participation as <1% (932 women) of the target population were reached |
| Nigeria; Adepoju (2016) | Free cervical cancer screening programme sponsored by the Osun State government | Uptake of cervical cancer screening was low |
| Nigeria; Bassey (2008) | In the period under study, screening was free of charge at three selected hospitals in Uyo | The study reports poor participation of the target population as only 332 women participated in the 5 y when free monthly screening was offered |