Litcius/Paper detail

HPV self-sampling and follow-up over two rounds of cervical screening in Australia – the iPap trial

Farhana Sultana, Dorota M. Gertig, Dallas R. English, J. A. Simpson, Kelly T. Drennan, C. David Wrede, Robyn Mullins, Stella Heley, Marion Saville, Julia Brotherton

2022Journal of Medical Screening14 citationsDOI

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: Previously, based on 6 months of follow-up, we showed that HPV self-sampling improved participation in cervical screening compared to a reminder letter for Pap testing for never- and under-screened women. Here, we report follow-up and related screening outcomes for women who participated in the initial self-sampling over two screening rounds. SETTING: The randomised controlled trial was conducted in Australia. METHODS: Never- and under-screened women were randomly allocated to the HPV self-sampling or the reminder for Pap test arm and followed at 6 and 36 months since the kits were first mailed. RESULTS: The first round of HPV self-sampling kits were mailed from May-July 2014 to 12 572 women. After 36 months, 19% of never-screened and 9% of under-screened women returned a kit for HPV testing; 2.7% were HPV 16/18 and 5.8% non-16/18 HPV positive. Compliance with first round follow-up was 84% (95% CI: 77.1-89.5%). Non-compliant and cytology triage negative women were mailed another kit at 12 months. Compliance at 12-month follow-up was 59.3% (49.4 to 68.6%). Of 37 women with a 12-month repeat HPV, 70% were positive. Of women who tested negative for HPV in the first round (n = 1573), 25% attended regular screening in the next round and none had CIN2 + detected. The overall prevalence of CIN2 + was 8.5 per 1000 screened (4.8 to 13.9 per 1000). CONCLUSION: While self-sampling can successfully engage women, compliance with repeat testing may require monitoring. The clinician-supported self-collection pathway now in use in Australia will likely improve women's engagement with follow-up.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineCervical cancer screeningCervical screeningTriageGynecologySampling (signal processing)ColposcopyObstetricsCervical cancerPap testInternal medicineCancerEmergency medicineComputer scienceComputer visionFilter (signal processing)Cervical Cancer and HPV ResearchGlobal Cancer Incidence and ScreeningWomen's cancer prevention and management