Grant Details
Grant Number: |
1R03CA094298-01 Interpret this number |
Primary Investigator: |
Koutsky, Laura |
Organization: |
University Of Washington |
Project Title: |
HPV Testing-Self-Collected Samples for Cervical Cancer |
Fiscal Year: |
2002 |
Abstract
DESCRIPTION (provided by applicant):
Human papillomaviruses (primarily HPV 16 and 18) play a central role in the
development of in situ and invasive cervical cancer. The fact that most
cervical intraepithelial lesions spontaneously resolve, along with the high
costs incurred by follow-up of women with Pap smears showing atypical squamous
cells of undetermined significance (ASCUS) or low grade squamous
intraepithelial lesions (LSIL), has generated interest in the use of HPV DNA
assays for managing women with cervical abnormalities. A large proportion of
women in the United States do not undergo routine Pap smear screening
according to recommended screening intervals, suggesting a need for an
alternative, non-invasive method for cervical cancer screening. However,
studies that have assessed the performance of self-collected screening methods
for detection of high-grade cervical disease have been limited by
generalizability, sample size, verification bias, and other methodological
flaws. There has not been a large study in the United States to examine the
possibility of using a self-collected sample to test for HPV DNA as screening
for CIN 2/3. The long term goal of the proposed study is to evaluate whether a
self-collected test for oncogenic types of HPV could be used to screen women
to detect CIN 2-3. Specifically, the study will (1) estimate the accuracy
(e.g., sensitivity, specificity, detection rate, and false referral rate) of
HPV DNA testing using self-collected vaginal samples relative to the accuracy
of clinician-directed ThinPrep Pap smears for detecting biopsy-confirmed CIN
2-3, and (2) estimate the accuracy of HPV testing of self-collected samples
relative to testing of clinician-directed samples for detecting
biopsy-confirmed CIN 2-3. The study will be conducted as part of the ongoing
Evaluation of Cervical Cancer Screening Methodologies (EVA) project among a
population of women attending Planned Parenthood of Western Washington (PPWW)
clinics (Tacoma, Lakewood, and Federal Way). Approximately 2,400 women ages
18-55 will be screened throughout the course of the study. Those with (1)
ASCUS, LSIL, or HSIL on Pap smear, (2) high-risk HPV DNA detected in
self-administered or clinician-administered sampling, and (3) a 10% random
sample of women with normal Pap smears and negative HPV DNA test results at
the screening visit will be asked to return for a follow-up visit, which will
include specimens for a ThinPrep smear and HPV testing and
colposcopically-directed biopsy of cervical lesions. An accurate self-test for
high-risk HPV types could have several important public health implications,
by offering women (1) an alternative cervical screening method, (2) triage for
equivocal Pap smears, (3) surveillance for recurrence after treatment for CIN
2 or higher, (4) testing for other STDs, and (5) reduced costs associated with
office visits.
Publications
None