Overview
The American Society for Colposcopy and Cervical Pathology (ASCCP) recommended HPV testing or co-cytology testing as the standard primary approach for cervical cancer (CC) screening, which is highly sensitive for detection of cervical intraepithelial neoplasia grade 3 or worse. However, in clinical CC screening practice, the specificity and positive predictive value of the ASCCP-recommended strategy is relatively low, which leads to excessive colposcopy and common overtreatment, especially in China with a large number of cervical cancer cases. HPV integration in the host genome is a critical step in cervical carcinogenesis and is highly specific for detection of cervical cancer. Whether HPV integration analysis can play a role in the triage of cervical cancer screening has not yet been investigated.
Description
Based on the dilemma of the cervical cancer screening process, in the last five years, our team developed a novel cervical cancer triage strategy and conducted a large cohort study, which evaluated the clinical performance of HPV integration triage alone and in combination with HPV16/18 or HPV16 genotyping of HPV-positive women. We found that the specificity of HPV integration for greater than cervical intraepithelial neoplasia 3 was 94.5%, which was significantly higher than that of cytology (63.8%; P < 0.001) in our previous retrospective study.Here, we conducted a large prospective cohort study evaluating the clinical performance of HPV integration triage of HPV-positive women.
Eligibility
Inclusion Criteria:
- Consenting women aged 20y-70y with HPV-positive results
Exclusion Criteria:
- Not providing informed consent
- previously confirmed CIN, cervical cancer, or other malignancies
- previous therapeutic procedure to cervix
- pregnancy