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Gemma Rebello a Colposcopy Clinic, Royal Infirmary of Edinburgh, Lothian
University Hospitals NHS Trust, Edinburgh EH3 9YW, b Regional Clinical
Virology Laboratory, City Hospital, Lothian University Hospitals NHS
Trust, Edinburgh EH10 5SB
Correspondence to: N
Hallam
Following publication of a report in Health
Technology Assessment the NHS is running a pilot scheme screening
women for human papillomavirus if they have a mildly dyskaryotic or
borderline smear.1 How reliable is
testing for human papillomavirus as a marker for high grade disease in
those with mildly abnormal smears?
Three hundred and thirty three consecutive new patients (aged 17 to 61 years, median 30 years) referred for colposcopy with persistent
borderline or mildly dyskaryotic smears and who consented to the study
were tested for human papillomavirus (high risk types only) with the
Digene Hybrid Capture assay HC II (Abbott Laboratories, Maidenhead), by
using cervical brush specimens placed in Digene transport medium, and
were treated by large loop excision of the transformation zone.
The table summarises test performance, and table A on the
BMJ 's website presents results by age, smear
history, and test cut off.2 Subjects aged under 30 years
(166) were more likely than older subjects (167) to test positive for
human papillomavirus (79% (131/166) v 45% (75/167);
A proportion of patients with mildly abnormal smears will harbour
high grade disease.3 Identifying this subgroup to target appropriate management is an important clinical issue. Colposcopy itself does not identify high grade disease reliably
and we asked whether testing for human papillomavirus might
improve diagnostic accuracy. We found that testing for human
papillomavirus had a higher overall sensitivity (93% [1 pg/ml cut
off] to 85% [4 pg/ml]) than specificity (55% [1 pg/ml] to 62%
[4 pg/ml]) in detecting those with high grade disease, thus limiting
its usefulness as a surrogate marker (table). This differential was
greater for younger women, for those with mild dyskaryosis, and at 1 pg/ml cut off (table). Testing performed best with negative predictive values (prevalence adjusted) of 96% in older women and 94% overall (1 pg/ml).
The report in Health Technology Assessment concludes that
"the clearest role for HPV testing at the moment is in the management of women with borderline or mildly dyskaryotic smears. In particular, those aged above 30 years who test positive for high risk types could
be referred immediately for colposcopy, while those younger than 30 years who test negative could receive less-intensive surveillance." The report supports limited introduction of testing for human papillomavirus, which should be carefully monitored, and encourages further research, including assessing the safety of returning to
routine screening women with borderline or mild smears who test
negative for human papillomavirus. Extrapolating our results to these
guidelines would mean that 55% of those aged 30 years or over who test
positive and are referred would have high grade disease but such
disease might be missed in a small proportion of those testing negative
and not referred (4% for older subjects, 11% for younger ones), this
being more significant for younger women if they then face less
intensive surveillance. We recognise, however, that our study
population, with repeated abnormal smears, differs from that at triage
for a single abnormal smear when the prevalence of high grade disease
would probably be lower.
Manos et al report that human papillomavirus testing is useful in
triaging those with atypical squamous cells of undetermined significance (approximates to borderline change)4; others
are evaluating this but believe that testing has limited potential in
triaging low grade squamous intraepithelial lesions (approximates to
mild dyskaryosis).5 We found an overall test sensitivity and specificity of 86% and 76% for 75 subjects with borderline smears, 94% and 39% for 117 with mild dyskaryosis, and 95% and 54%
for 141 with both smear types (1 pg/ml). We welcome the NHS pilot
scheme while advising caution in the clinical use of testing for human
papillomavirus, especially at a single point in time.
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Participants, methods, and results
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Participants, methods, and...
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2=39.4, df=1, P<0.001) and (dependent on this) to
have cervical intraepithelial neoplasia grade 2 or 3 (high grade
disease) (43% (71/166) v 27% (45/167);
2=8.5, df=1, P<0.01).
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Acknowledgments |
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We thank nursing and medical colleagues at the colposcopy clinic for their assistance.
Contributors: GR had the idea for the study and reviewed the histology. NH performed human papillomavirus testing, wrote the paper, and will act as guarantor. All the authors were clinically involved in carrying out the study and contributed to the final version of the paper.
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Footnotes |
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Funding: The Royal Infirmary of Edinburgh Endowment Fund. Abbott Laboratories kindly provided human papillomavirus testing kits at a discount.
Competing interests: GR and NH have been sponsored by Digene Diagnostics to attend several conferences.
Table A appears on the BMJ's
website
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References |
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| 1. | Cuzick J, Sasieni P, Davies P, Adams J, Normand C, Frater A, et al. A systematic review of the role of human papillomavirus testing within a cervical screening programme. Health Technol Assess 1999;3 (14). |
| 2. | Cuzick J, Beverley E, Ho L, Terry G, Sapper H, Mielzynska I, et al. HPV testing in primary screening of older women. Br J Cancer 1999; 81: 554-558[CrossRef][Medline]. |
| 3. | Kinney WK, Manos MM, Hurley LB, Ransley JE. Where's the high-grade cervical neoplasia? The importance of the minimally abnormal Papanicolaou diagnoses. Obstet Gynecol 1998; 91: 973-976[CrossRef][Medline]. |
| 4. |
Manos MM, Kinney WK, Hurley LB, Sherman ME, Shieh-Ngai J, Kurman RJ, et al.
Identifying women with cervical neoplasia: using human papillomavirus DNA testing for equivocal Papanicolaou results.
JAMA
1999;
281:
1605-1610 |
| 5. |
The Atypical Squamous Cells of Undetermined Significance/Low-Grade Squamous Intraepithelial Lesions Triage Study (ALTS) Group.
Human papillomavirus testing for triage of women with cytologic evidence of low-grade squamous intraepithelial lesions: baseline data from a randomized trial.
J Natl Cancer Inst
2000;
92:
397-402 |
(Accepted 11 October 2000)
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