The impact of adjusting for hysterectomy prevalence on cervical cancer incidence rates and trends among women aged 30 years or older—United States, 2001-2019

Author:

Gopalani Sameer V12,Sawaya George F34,Rositch Anne F56,Dasari Sabitha7,Thompson Trevor D1,Mix Jacqueline M12,Saraiya Mona1

Affiliation:

1. Division of Cancer Prevention and Control, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention , Atlanta, GA 30341 , United States

2. Oak Ridge Institute for Science and Education , Oak Ridge, TN 37380 , United States

3. Department of Obstetrics , Gynecology and Reproductive Sciences, , San Francisco, CA 94143 , United States

4. University of California San Francisco , Gynecology and Reproductive Sciences, , San Francisco, CA 94143 , United States

5. Health Outcomes and Real-World Evidence, Hologic, Inc , Baltimore, MD 21205 , United States

6. Department of Epidemiology, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health , Baltimore, MD 21205 , United States

7. Cyberdata Technologies, Inc. , Herndon, VA 20170 , United States

Abstract

Abstract Hysterectomy protects against cervical cancer when the cervix is removed. However, measures of cervical cancer incidence often fail to exclude women with a hysterectomy from the population-at-risk denominator, underestimating and distorting disease burden. In this study, we estimated hysterectomy prevalence from the Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System surveys to remove the women who were not at risk of cervical cancer from the denominator and combined these estimates with the US Cancer Statistics data. From these data, we calculated age-specific and age-standardized incidence rates for women aged >30 years from 2001-2019, adjusted for hysterectomy prevalence. We calculated the difference between unadjusted and adjusted incidence rates and examined trends by histology, age, race and ethnicity, and geographic region using joinpoint regression. The hysterectomy-adjusted cervical cancer incidence rate from 2001-2019 was 16.7 per 100 000 women—34.6% higher than the unadjusted rate. After adjustment, incidence rates were higher by approximately 55% among Black women, 56% among those living in the East South Central division, and 90% among women aged 70-79 and ≥80 years. These findings underscore the importance of adjusting for hysterectomy prevalence to avoid underestimating cervical cancer incidence rates and masking disparities by age, race, and geographic region. This article is part of a Special Collection on Gynecological Cancers.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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