Abstract

A review is presented of 15 years of clinical experience working with women who developed cervical cancer within a short interval after the last reported negative Papanicolaou smear. Our initial report concerned isolated cases in which women were diagnosed with invasive cervical cancer within 1 year of a reported normal Papanicolaou smear. Our second report focused on a 10-year review of the Yale–New Haven Hospital experience, during which 40 of 555 women had rapidly progressive invasive disease; 35 cases (87.5%) occurred in women younger than 40 years old and almost all of the 40 diagnosed because of persistent symptoms despite a recent normal Papanicolaou smear. Our final experience is a population-based study of all women in Connecticut who developed cervical cancer between 1985 and 1990. A total of 118 of 481 (24.5%) participants were diagnosed with cervical cancer within 3 years of their last true-negative Papanicolaou smear. Adenocarcinomas occurred in 38 cases (32.2%). These data suggest that rapidly occurring cervical cancer may be a manifestation of endocervical carcinomas that have been inadequately screened. (Am J Obstet Gynecol 1996;175:1105-9.)

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