Literature DB >> 33368249

Cervical cancer prevention in El Salvador: A prospective evaluation of screening and triage strategies incorporating high-resolution microendoscopy to detect cervical precancer.

Sonia G Parra1, Leticia M López-Orellana2, Adán R Molina Duque2, Jennifer L Carns1, Richard A Schwarz1, Chelsey A Smith1, Marya Ortiz Silvestre3, Salvador Diaz Bazan3, Pablo A Escobar3, Juan C Felix4, Preetha Ramalingam5, Philip E Castle6, Miriam L Cremer2,7, Mauricio Maza2, Kathleen M Schmeler8, Rebecca R Richards-Kortum1.   

Abstract

Cervical cancer remains a leading cause of cancer death for women in low- and middle-income countries. The goal of our study was to evaluate screening and triage strategies, including high-resolution microendoscopy (HRME), to detect cervical abnormalities concerning for precancer at the point of care. Women (n = 1824) were enrolled at the Instituto de Cáncer de El Salvador. All underwent screening by both human papillomavirus (HPV) testing using careHPV and visual inspection with acetic acid (VIA). Screen-positives, along with 10% of screen-negatives, were invited to return for a follow-up examination that included triage with VIA, colposcopy and HRME imaging. Biopsies were taken of any abnormalities identified. If no abnormalities were identified, then the worst scoring site by HRME was biopsied. The sensitivities of HPV testing and VIA to screen for cervical intraepithelial neoplasia Grade 2 or more severe diagnoses (CIN2+) were 82.1% and 75% (P = .77), while the specificities were 90.4% and 80.9% (P < .001), respectively. The sensitivities of VIA, colposcopy and HRME as triage tests for CIN2+ were 82.1%, 82.1% and 71.4%, respectively (P ≥ .38). HRME had a significantly higher specificity (66.7%) than VIA (51.9%) (P < .001) and colposcopy (53.3%) (P < .001). When evaluating different theoretical screening and triage strategies, screening with HPV testing followed by triage with HRME would result in more women receiving appropriate care (97%) compared to screening with VIA (75%) or HPV alone (90%). Our findings demonstrate that screening with HPV is superior to VIA, and that triage with HRME imaging increases the specificity of detecting CIN2+ at the point of care in a low-resource setting.
© 2020 UICC.

Entities:  

Keywords:  cervical cancer; high-resolution microendoscopy; human papillomavirus; visual inspection with acetic acid

Year:  2020        PMID: 33368249     DOI: 10.1002/ijc.33454

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Int J Cancer        ISSN: 0020-7136            Impact factor:   7.396


  1 in total

1.  Multi-task network for automated analysis of high-resolution endomicroscopy images to detect cervical precancer and cancer.

Authors:  David Brenes; C J Barberan; Brady Hunt; Sonia G Parra; Mila P Salcedo; Júlio C Possati-Resende; Miriam L Cremer; Philip E Castle; José H T G Fregnani; Mauricio Maza; Kathleen M Schmeler; Richard Baraniuk; Rebecca Richards-Kortum
Journal:  Comput Med Imaging Graph       Date:  2022-02-26       Impact factor: 7.422

  1 in total

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