eISSN: 2084-9869
ISSN: 1233-9687
Polish Journal of Pathology
Current issue Archive Manuscripts accepted About the journal Supplements Editorial board Abstracting and indexing Subscription Contact Instructions for authors Publication charge Ethical standards and procedures
Editorial System
Submit your Manuscript
SCImago Journal & Country Rank
3/2018
vol. 69
 
Share:
Share:
abstract:
Letter to the Editor

The health outcome and the costs of primary HPV testing with dual-stain cytology triage in cervical cancer screening

Wiebren A.A. Tjalma

Pol J Pathol 2018; 69 (3): 319-320
Online publish date: 2018/11/20
View full text Get citation
 
PlumX metrics:
Dear Editor,
The article by Celewicz et al. describes nicely the clinical efficacy of p16/Ki67 dual-stained cervical cytology in secondary prevention of cervical cancer [1]. In their article they show that the assessment of p16/Ki-67 can lead to an increased efficiency of cervical cancer screening through higher sensitivity and specificity. Additional they state that the cost/benefit ratio may be higher in comparison to HPV DNA or mRNA detection.
Recently, we published a systematic literature review on the diagnostic performance of dual-staining cytology for cervical cancer screening together with a model that looked at the impact of dual-stain cytology on the health outcome and the health system budget [2, 3].
For cervical cancer screening we recommend primary HPV detection instead of cytology [4]. Primary HPV screening has a higher sensitivity then primary cytology screening but a lower specificity. In order words a normal cytology test has a greater chance of being false negative then a normal HPV test. With primary HPV screening you will detect considerably more abnormalities. The HPV testing will detect all HPV infections: transient and persistent. A downside is of course the detection of these transient HPV infection(s). They can be regarded as “false positive”. Referring all HPV positive women for colposcopy and biopsy would increase not only the sensitivity, but also the morbidity and costs. The latter two points could lead to a decrease in cervical cancer screening attendance. Colposcopy triage of HPV positive women based upon dual stain cytology instead of cytology would increase the sensitivity significantly with no significant impact on specificity [2, 3]. In order words dual stain cytology will reduce the incidence of cervical cancer and safe more women’s lives. At the same time, it will lead to a reduction of unnecessary colposcopy referrals, biopsies and follow-up visits. Primary HPV screening with dual-stain cytology triage in Belgium would reduce the cervical cancer incidence and mortality by respectively 36% and 40% [3]. Dual-stain cytology or diagnostic cytology is additional testing and assumes additional costs. A cost-effectiveness evaluation of diagnostic cytology is therefore essential. A Budget Impact Model (BIM) was created based on a Markov decision-analytic model in order to calculate the budget impact of primary HPV screening with dual-stain cytology triage instead of cytology [3]. In a simulation for Belgium...


View full text...
Quick links
© 2024 Termedia Sp. z o.o.
Developed by Bentus.