Affiliation:
1. Singapore General Hospital, Singapore
Abstract
Introduction: Good compliance of the management of abnormal results is important for effective cervical screening. This study investigated the rate of surveillance and follow-up outcomes for human papillomavirus (HPV)-positive women in cervical screening.
Method: Women on surveillance by repeat HPV testing were identified in a prospectively managed database. Data retrieved included women’s age, country residence status, history of colposcopy, HPV-DNA status on the first and repeat tests, dates of follow-up during the 5 years since the initial screening, and histological diagnosis of cervical lesions. The main outcome measures were compliance rate for repeat HPV testing, regression and persistence rates of HPV subtypes, and detection rate of high-grade lesions (CIN2+).
Results: This analysis included 680 residents in the community, mean age 44.8 (95% confidence interval 20.1–69.5) years. The compliance rate of repeat testing was 28.2% at 12 months and, cumulatively, 42.8% for the entire 5-year follow-up period. The rates were unaffected by age (P=0.5829) nor prior colposcopy (P=0.1607). There were 5 (1.7%) cases of CIN2+ detected. Of 391 women on longitudinal follow-up, 194 (60.8%) cleared their HPV infection. Some women with multiple HPV infection cleared 1 but not the other subtype(s). Thus, the regression rate was 90.3% for HPV-16, 87.0% for HPV-18 and 65.2% for HPV-12-others (P=0.0001). The annualised HPV regression rates were similar for HPV subtypes and for each follow-up year.
Conclusion: Surveillance of HPV positivity is clinically important for detecting high-grade lesions. Despite a high regression rate of HPV, surveillance hesitancy is a serious weakness in routine cervical screening.
Publisher
Academy of Medicine, Singapore
Cited by
1 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献