Litcius/Paper detail

Effect of organised cervical cancer screening on cervical cancer mortality in Europe: a systematic review

Erik E. L. Jansen, N. Zielonke, Adriana Gini, Anniina Anttila, Nereo Segnan, Zoltán Vokó, Urška Ivanuš, Martin McKee, Harry J. de Koning, I.M.C.M. deKok

202018 citationsOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Background: Organised cervical cancer (CC) screening programmes are delivered in many different ways across the European Union and its regions. Our aim was to systematically review the impact of these programs on CC mortality. Methods: Two independent reviewers identified all eligible studies investigating the effect of organised screening on CC mortality in Europe. Six databases including Embase, Medline and Web of Science were searched (March 2018) with predefined inclusion and exclusion criteria. Only original studies with at least five years of follow-up were considered. Validated tools were used to assess the risk of bias of the included studies. Results: Ten observational studies were included: seven cohort and three case-control studies. No randomised controlled trials were found, and there were no eligible studies from the eastern and southern part of Europe. Among the eligible studies, seven were conducted in the twentieth century; they scored lower on the risk of bias assessment. CC mortality reduction for women attending organised screening vs. non-attenders ranged from 41% to 92% in seven studies. Reductions were similar in Western (45–92%) and Northern (41–87

Topics & Concepts

MedicineCervical cancerObservational studyMEDLINECohort studyDemographyCervical screeningEuropean unionFamily medicineCancerGynecologyInternal medicineEconomic policySociologyPolitical scienceLawBusinessCervical Cancer and HPV ResearchGlobal Cancer Incidence and ScreeningEndometrial and Cervical Cancer Treatments