Abstract

ObjectiveColposcopy can be used with Electrical Impedance Spectroscopy (EIS) as an adjunct, to assess the presence of High Grade Cervical Intra-epithelial Neoplasia (CIN2+). This analysis of longitudinal data has used the results from women with a negative colposcopy, in order to see if the initial (index) EIS results were able to predict the women who subsequently developed CIN2+. A further objective was to investigate what tissue structural changes might be reflected in the electrical impedance spectra.Methods847 patients were referred with low grade cytologly. EIS measurements were made around the transformation zone of the cervix during colposcopy. Every EIS spectrum was matched to a template representing CIN2+ and the result was positive if the match exceeded a probability index threshold. The colposcopic impression was also recorded. All the women who developed biopsy proven CIN2+ within three years of the index colposcopy were identified.ResultsThe median follow-up was 30.5 months. Where both CI and EIS were initially positive, there was an increased prevalence (8.13%) of CIN2+ developing as opposed to 3.45% in the remaining patients (p=0.0159). In addition, if three or more EIS spectra were positive there was a higher prevalence (9.62% as opposed to 3.56% p=0.0132) of CIN2+ at three years. The index spectra recorded from the women who developed CIN2+ showed EIS changes consistent with increases in the extracellular volume and in cell size inhomogeneity.ConclusionEIS does offer prognostic information on the risk of CIN2+ developing over the three-year period following the EIS measurements. The changes in EIS spectra are consistent with an increase in cell size diversity as pre-malignancy develops. These changes may be a consequence of increased genetic diversity as neoplasia develops.

Highlights

  • ; Introduction Colposcopy is widely used as part of screening programmes to detect cervical cancer and pre-cancer

  • In every case the results of the index colposcopy examination were considered negative for the presence of high grade cervical intra-epithelial neoplasia (CIN2+), if the colposcopic impression (CI) was less than CIN2+ and if either, no biopsy was taken or, any biopsy taken was reported as CIN1 or less

  • The main objective of this study was to use colposcopy and the associated Electrical Impedance Spectroscopy (EIS) data collected over more than five years to see if the initial results were able to identify any increased risk of CIN2+ developing over a three-year followup

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Summary

Introduction

; Introduction Colposcopy is widely used as part of screening programmes to detect cervical cancer and pre-cancer. Underwood [2] in 2012 reported on 25 studies and give pooled values of 91.3% for sensitivity and 24.6% for specificity Both Mitchell and Underwood reported a very wide variation in diagnostic accuracy figures. Brown and Tidy [3] in 2019 reviewed 18 publications that included sufficient raw data to enable comparative diagnostic accuracy figures to be calculated. They reported a weighted mean value of 75.1% for the sensitivity of colposcopy. The recent changes in many organised cervical screening programmes, such as the assessment of primary human papillomavirus (HPV), has increased the number of wome

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