Abstract

BackgroundA pilot screening campaign in Rwanda, based on careHPV-testing followed by visual inspection with acetic acid triage (careHPV+VIA triage), was evaluated against other WHO-recommended screening options, namely HPV screen-and-treat and VIA screen-and-treat.Methods764 women aged 30-69 underwent at visit 1: i) VIA, and cervical cell collection for ii) careHPV in Rwanda, and iii) liquid-based cytology and GP5+/6+ HR-HPV PCR in The Netherlands. All 177 women positive by VIA, careHPV and/or PCR were recalled, of whom 84% attended. At visit 2, VIA was again used to triage screen-positive women for treatment and to obtain biopsies from all women either from visible lesions or at 12 o’clock of the squamocolumnar junction. Cross-sectional screening indices were estimated primarily against histological high-grade squamous intraepithelial lesions or worse (hHSIL+), after imputation of missing histology data, based on 1-visit or 2-visit approaches.ResultsIn a 1-visit screen-and-treat approach, VIA had sensitivity and specificity of 41% and 96%, respectively, versus 71% and 88% for careHPV, and 88% and 86% for PCR. In a 2-visit approach (in which hHSIL+ imputed among women without visit 2 were considered untreated) careHPV sensitivity dropped to 59% due to loss of 13% of hHSIL+. For careHPV+VIA triage, sensitivity dropped further to 35%, as another 24% of hHSIL+ were triaged to no treatment.ConclusionsCareHPV was not as sensitive as gold-standard PCR, but detected considerably more hHSIL+ than VIA. However, due to careHPV-positive hHSIL+ women being lost to follow-up and/or triaged to no treatment, 2-visit careHPV+VIA triage did not perform better than VIA screen-and-treat.

Highlights

  • A pilot screening campaign in Rwanda, based on careHPV-testing followed by visual inspection with acetic acid triage, was evaluated against other WHO-recommended screening options, namely human papillomavirus (HPV) screen-and-treat and VIA screen-and-treat

  • negative predictive value (NPV) was higher for careHPV (99.2%) than screening VIA (98.6%) but lower than that of polymerase chain reaction (PCR) (99.7%)

  • positive predictive value (PPV) for Histological high-grade squamous intraepithelial lesions (hHSIL)+ was highest for screening VIA (17%)

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Summary

Introduction

A pilot screening campaign in Rwanda, based on careHPV-testing followed by visual inspection with acetic acid triage (careHPV+VIA triage), was evaluated against other WHO-recommended screening options, namely HPV screen-and-treat and VIA screen-and-treat. Cervical cancer is the most commonly occurring female cancer in Rwanda, with a high incidence rate typical of many sub-Saharan African countries (42 cases per 100,000 women per year [1]). In order to reduce cervical cancer among older cohorts of women unprotected by the vaccination program, in 2013, the Rwandan Ministry of Health (MoH) initiated a screening campaign. This campaign was based on primary careHPV testing and the use of visual inspection with acetic acid (VIA) to triage careHPVpositive women for treatment [2]. The prediction of the efficacy of a HPV + VIA triage approach, as well as its recommendation over a VIA screen-and-treat approach, came from combining evidence of separate performances of HPV and VIA [5]

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