Title: Screening for cervical cancer
1Screening for cervical cancer
- Human Papillomavirus DNA versus Papanicolaou
Screening Tests for Cervical Cancer - Marie-Helene Mayrand, M.D., Eliane Duarte-Franco,
M.D., Isabel Rodrigues, M.D., Stephen D. Walter,
Ph.D., James Hanley, Ph.D., Alex Ferenczy, M.D.
Sam Ratnam, Ph.D., Francois Coutlee, M.D., and
Eduardo L. Franco, Dr.P.H., for Canadian Cervical
Cancer Screening Trial Study Group NEJM. October
18, 2007. - Ivania Rizo
- February 19, 2008
2Cervical Cancer
- Second most common cause of cancer-related
morbidity and mortality among women in developing
countries - - 371,200 new cases annually with a 50 percent
mortality rate - Past 50 years 75 decrease in incidence and
mortality in developed countries due to Pap tests
and the detection of precursor lesions and
earlier-stage cancers - However in the US, invasive cervical cancer
remains the cause of death for almost 4000 women
each year, approximately 1.3 of cancer deaths in
women. - Squamous cell carcinomas account for
- approximately 80 percent of cervical
- cancers and adenocarcinomas
- 15 percent.
3Background
- Risk factors include early onset of sexual
activity, multiple sexual partners, smoking, and
immunosuppression - Mean age of diagnosis of invasive cervical cancer
is 47 in the US, and the incidence increases with
age - Human papillomavirus (HPV) is central to the
development of cervical neoplasia and can be
detected in almost all cervical cancers -
4 Current Screening guidelines
- Annual Pap testing approximately 3 years after
- onset of sexual activity or at age 21 ( ACS
and USPSTF) - Cease screening after hysterectomy for benign
conditions or after age 65 (USPSTF) or 70 ( ACS)
in women with adequate recent screening, who are
not otherwise at high risk of cervical cancer - Max screening interval should be 3 years, with
more frequent screening at onset and in high-risk
situations (HIV, prior dysplasia, chronic
immunosuppression)
5Current Screening Guidelines
- HPV testing as an adjunct to cervical cytology
for screening is an acceptable strategy when used
in women aged 30 years or older. Combined
screening should only be done once every 3 years
since combined tests have a high NPV (99-100)
for high grade lesions. - Preferred management of ASCUS in most situations
is reflex HPV testing ( high risk types) on the
original LBC specimen collected for Pap test - Women with positive ASC-H and LSIL tests should
undergo colposcopy - Minimal follow up for high grade squamous
intraepithelial lesion, atypical glandular cells,
and AIS interpretations includes colposcopy and
endocervical curettage
6Objective
- To determine whether testing for DNA of oncogenic
HPV is superior to the Pap test for
cervical-cancer screening
7Participants
- Women ages 30 69 years. Per Mayrand et al., the
study was limited to women older than 30, since
in sexually active women younger than 30 years,
transient HPV infections are common, which gives
HPV DNA testing an unacceptably low specificity
in identifying cervical cancer precursors. - Women who sought screening tests for cervical
cancer in any of 30 clinics in Montreal and St.
Johns, Canada
8Exclusion Criteria
- Currently being followed for a cervical lesion
- Lack of cervix
- Pregnant
- Hx of cervical cancer
- Undergone Pap testing in the previous year
- Unable to provide consent
9Study design
- Randomized, controlled trial
- Participants were randomized 11 to 1 of 2 arms
the Pap screening arm or the HPV screening arm.
Participants were blinded to arm allocation. - There was insufficient evidence regarding the
efficacy of HPV DNA testing as a stand-alone
screening test to withhold Pap cytology from
women in the trial. Therefore, each arm included
both tests and the authors randomized the order
in which the test samples were collected. - A random sub sample of 10 of the women in St.
Johns and 20 of the women in Montreal with
negative index tests were invited to undergo
colposcopy. Per Mayrant et al. this allows for
correction of verification bias. - Cytotechnologists and cytopathologists were not
aware of the patients status as participants in
the study or HPV test results. Colposcopists and
pathologists were not aware of the screening-
test results. - Supported by a grant from the Canadian Institute
of Health Research and partially by unrestricted
grant from Merck Frosst Canada
10Outline of Study Design Mayrand MH et al.
Randomized controlled trial of human
papillomavirus testing versus Pap cytology in the
primary screening for cervical cancer precursors
design, methods, and preliminary accrual results
of the Canadian Cervical Cancer Screening Trial.
International Journal of Cancer 2006 119615-23
11Screening Tests
- Conventional ( slide smear) Pap test- results
reported according to the Bethesda System
terminology - Results of ASCUS, AGC (atypical glandular cells),
or worse were considered positive - Hybrid Capture 2 test ( HC2 probe B, Digene) was
used for HPV testing and tested for the 13
high-risk HPV types most commonly associated with
high-grade dysplasia and cancer - Positive HPV test if specimen had at least 1 pg
of HPV DNA per milliliter
12 Terminology Used in Reporting Cervical
cytology
Bundrick et al. Screening for cervical cancer and
initial treatment of patients with abnormal
results from papanicolaou testing. Mayo clinic
proceedings.2005 80(8) 1063-1068.
13Screening Tests
- Colposcopists followed standard protocol
- - endocervical curettage
- - ectocervical biopsies of all
abnormal-appearing cervical regions - - at least one biopsy of normal-appearing
ectocervical epithelium aiming at an aceto-white
transformation zone - Biopsy first and then treatment afterwards if
warranted
14Study Endpoint
- Primary endpoint Histological CIN2, CIN3, and
cervical cancer - 2 Case definitions
- Liberal definition all cases of grade 2 or 3
CIN, adenocarcinoma in situ, or cervical cancers
that were histologically confirmed on the basis
of any of the histologic specimens - Conservative definition met liberal criteria and
in addition were confirmed in the LEEP specimen
or confirmed on biopsy when ablation was done
15Statistical analysis
- Differences in categorical data were assessed by
Fishers test and the chi-square test - Differences in continuous data was assessed by
Kruskal-Wallis test - Mayrand et. al. obtained verification in a random
sample of participants with negative screening - Verification bias caused by verification of the
lesion only in participants with a positive
result, can lead to overestimates of sensitivity
16Enrollment and Outcomes
Mayrand M et al. N Engl J Med 20073571579-1588
17Characteristics of Participants According to
Study Group and Center
Mayrand M et al. N Engl J Med 20073571579-1588
18Results
- According to the conservative definition
sensitivity of the Pap test (55.4) was
significantly lower than the sensitivity of the
HPV test ( 94.6, P0.01) - Specificity of the Pap test after the correction
for verification bias was 96.8 versus 94.1 in
the HPV test ( Plt0.001) using the conservative
definition - Difference in corrected sensitivity between the
liberal and the conservative definitions - There were 4 cases of high-grade intraepithelial
neoplasia among participants in whom both
screening tests were negative according to the
liberal definition. According to conservative
definition there were no cases. These 4 cases
influenced how the authors extrapolated the
occurrence of high-grade cervical intraepithelial
neoplasia lesions among all women with negative
tests. The authors state that this explains the
difference in corrected sensitivity between the
liberal and conservative definitions. - The results of the tests were not influenced by
the order in which they were collected
therefore, the authors pooled the two groups to
access different screening algorithms.
19Group-Specific Comparison of Pap and HPV Testing
to Identify High-Grade Cervical Intraepithelial
Neoplasia and Cancer
Mayrand M et al. N Engl J Med 20073571579-1588
20Comparison of Pap Testing and HPV DNA Testing
Using Combined Study Groups According to
Different Positivity Thresholds and Test
Combinations
Mayrand M et al. N Engl J Med 20073571579-1588
21Discussion
- According to the CONSERVATIVE definition the HPV
test was more sensitive (39.2 difference) and
only 2.7 less specific than Pap testing - Corrections for verification bias provided
absolute rather than relative estimates - Per Mayrand et al. the protocol mandated
endocervical curettage and biopsies in all
participants who underwent colposcopy, therefore
reducing the possibility of missing CIN. But the
protocol reveals more indolent lesions that would
probably be missed in routine colposcopy. - Per authors, the liberal definition detected
lesions not routinely found in community
screening and the conservative definition reduced
overdiagnosis. - The authors believed that some of the specimens
classified as CIN negative per LEEP but positive
per cytology or colposcopy were false positives,
due to misclassification of squamous metaplasia
as cervical intraepithelial neoplasia.
22Weaknesses
- Outcome measure (conservative versus liberal
outcome definitions) perhaps chosen after the
fact - Alternative outcome measure such as
histologically verified, high-grade cervical
intraepithelial neoplasia in either the
colposcopically targeted biopsy specimen or the
final excision. - Negative HPV tests that were consequently
positive on biopsy and negative on excision were
interpreted as false positive results versus
false negative results - Selection bias and inability to generalize
results to the screening population - - Exclusion of young women and pregnant women
perhaps causes a bias against Pap tests and for
HPV testing - - Authors did state they excluded women under
30 because HPV DNA testing would result in low
specificity
23Weaknesses
- Per Berkhof and Meijer, in order to reliably
state the sensitivity of HPV tests, the sample
size of women with two negative tests and
histological verification needs to be larger. - They state that a very small number of positive
CIN 2 or worse makes a big impact on the
sensitivity of the HPV test.
24So what can we conclude?
- We are not ready to use HPV tests for primary
screening. - Need rapid, simple, accurate , and affordable HPV
tests - At this time, we may choose to use HPV DNA test
as adjunct to cytology for screening women over
30 years of age and no more frequently than every
3 years.
25References
- Bundrick J, Cook D, Gostout B. Screening for
Cervical Cancer and Initial Treatment of Patients
With Abnormal Results From Papanicolaou Testing.
Mayo Clinic Proceedings. 2005801063-1068. - Lytwyn et al. Correspondence to Human
Papillomavirus DNA versus Papancolaou Screening
Tests for Cervical Cancer. 2008358 (2) 641-
644. - Mayrand MH, Duarte-Franco E, Coutlee F, et al.
Randomized controlled trial of human
papillomavirus testing versus Pap cytology in the
primary screening for cervical cancer precursors
design, methods and preliminary accrual results
of the Canadian Cervical Cancer Screening Trial
(CCCaST). Int J Cancer 2006119615-623.