Title: Position Statement on Cervical Cancer Screening with HPV Testing
1Position Statement on Cervical Cancer Screening
with HPV Testing
- Early Detection Subcommittee and the Breast and
Cervical Cancers Work Group - October 24, 2003
2Thanks
- Early Detection Subcommittee
- Breast and Cervical Cancer Workgroup
- Drs. John Boggess and Evan Myers
3In the Beginning
- Unintended benefits of basic science
- Luck, recognition, and persistence
4Why Cervical Cancer?
5Substantial Mortality Decline
Women
6NC Womens Cancer Burden
SCHS 2000, 2001
7Disparity in Burden
All Ages, By White/Black
1.25
1.56
SCHS 2000, 2001
8Cervical Cancer Screening is Good
9Cervical Cancer Screening NC/US
BRFSS 2002
10NC Women Current Screening
Past 3 yrs
Past 2 yrs
Past yr
Past 5 yrs
BRFSS 2002
11NC Cervical Screening
Race/Ethnicity
Household Income
BRFSS 2002
12Progress Toward Goals
NC Cancer Control Plan 2001 - 2006
- Goal Increase Pap Smear rates
- Ever Had -- from 94 to 98
- Had Last 3 Yrs -- from 87 to 94
- Address disparities
- Current Status
- Ever Had -- 95
- Had Last 3 Yrs -- 90
- Disparities still exist
13Why Cervical Cancer?
14This is Why
- 50 of women diagnosed with invasive cervical
cancer -- no Pap test in the past 5 years - 1992 NC Cervical Cancer Task Force
- Screening detects prior to cancer
- Treatment following screening is effective
- Potential to reduce burden significantly
- Screening doesnt always work
- But, not screening doesnt work
15Standard Pap Test (Cytology)
- No clinical trial
- Dramatic falls in cervical cancer burden
- General consensus among expert groups
- Standard preparation v. liquid-based
- Relatively inexpensive test
- Liquid-based more expensive than standard
- Widespread use
16Human Papilloma Virus (HPV)
- Primary factor in cervical cancer
- 90 - 100 contain HPV DNA
- Necessary but insufficient
- HPV infection
- Endemic, transient, often no/minor changes
- HPV DNA test
- FDA approved for combined testing with Pap test
- More expensive and requires liquid-based test
- Not approved as primary screen
17Combined Testing
- Women ages 30 yrs and older
- May increase sensitivity
- Normal cytology negative HPV no screening for
3 years - Normal cytology or ASC-US positive HPV
further evaluation - ASC-US negative HPV followed without colposcopy
18Expert Group Agreement
- ACS, USPSTF asymptomatic, normal risk
- Areas of substantial agreement
- Who
- Where/How
- How often
- When to Stop
- When Not to Screen
19Expert Group Disagreement
- ACS, USPSTF
- Liquid-based cytology
- USPSTF insufficient evidence for or against
- ACS acceptable alternative
- HPV combined testing
- USPSTF insufficient evidence for or against
- ACS acceptable alternative
20Evidence for HPV/Combined Test
- Direct evidence
- No randomized trials or prospective studies
- HPV testing more sensitive
- Normal cytology negative HPV low risk of
developing CIN 2 or 3 during next 3-5 years - Indirect evidence from models
- Increased sensitivity increased cost without
decreased frequency - Cost effective if frequency reduced among women
ages 35 and older
21Considerations
- Strong evidence lacking
- Extensive patient and provider education
necessary to implement cost-effectively - Guidelines lacking for management of normal
cytology positive HPV
22Considerations
- Health insurance for HPV testing not uniform
- Increased screening will have the greatest effect
on cervical cancer burden - Initial costs of new technology may decrease
number of women screened
23Recommendation for Position
- Subcommittee supports the USPSTF
- Insufficient evidence to recommend for or against
combined testing - Continue to review evidence and reconsider
24Additional Considerations
- Vaccines in development possible future strategy
- HPV as primary screen undergoing prospective
trial evaluation - HPV testing in management and triage of ASC-US
outside scope of review - HPV testing in research also outside scope of
review
25(No Transcript)
26Indirect evidence from models
- Increasing sensitivity (I.e. combined testing)
increases costs UNLESS you decrease the frequency - More sensitive tests can be more effective and
less expensive than less expensive tests, if done
at less frequent intervals - In women over age 30-35, combined testing is a
viable alternative, but only if done no more
frequently than every 3 years
27Subcommittee Review
- On September 5th the Early Detection
Subcommittee met to discuss the role of HPV
screening in the screening for cervical cancer
and to hear from 2 national experts - John Boggess, MD, gynecology/oncology specialist
and participating author on the evidence review
for the USPSTF - Evan Myers, MD, MPH, obstetrics/gynecologist,
published author on cervical cancer screening,
and participant on panel to develop ACS guidelines
28Estimated effects on the NC BCCCP program
29Guidelines addressing combined testing using HPV
screening
- UPSTF evidence is insufficient to recommend
for or against the routine use of HPV testing as
a primary screening test for cervical cancer - ACS combined testing in women age 30 and older
as an alternative to cervical cytology testing
alone no more than every 3 years - ACOG similar to ACS
30Screening failures
- 50-70 of cancers occur in women who have never
been screened were not screened in the last 5
years - among screened women, failures occur due to
- failure to follow up abnormal results (22-63)
- rapid progression
- abnormalities missed by screening (14-33)
31N.C. Cervical Cancer Burden
- 8.7 per 100k incidence (2000 SCHS)
- 2.8 per 100k mortality (2001 SCHS)
- overall, declining incidence and mortality which
parallel national trends - pronounced disparities between African-American
and white women, especially among those gt50 years
32Screening for cervical cancer
- 95 women report ever having had a Pap smear 90
in the last 3 years (2002 BRFSS) - little improvement in the last decade
- older age, low education or income, and not
having had a recent checkup are associated with
never having a Pap test