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Self‐collected Pap smears may provide an acceptable and effective method of cervical cancer screening
Author(s) -
Singla Amita A.,
Komesaroff Paul
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
health science reports
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.462
H-Index - 7
ISSN - 2398-8835
DOI - 10.1002/hsr2.33
Subject(s) - colposcopy , medicine , pap smears , cervical cancer , obstetrics , gynecology , referral , papanicolaou stain , pap test , gold standard (test) , cytology , cervical cancer screening , cancer , family medicine , pathology , radiology
Background and aims The role of the Papanicolou (Pap) smear in the early detection and prevention of cervical cancer is well established. However, many women fail to undertake the test because of embarrassment or other reasons. To address this problem, we evaluated the feasibility of implementing self‐sampling of cervical cytology as an alternative to clinician‐collected Pap smears and compared it with the gold standard of colposcopy in terms of specificity. Materials and methods A prospective preliminary study of 40 women recruited from the colposcopy clinic of a tertiary referral hospital was undertaken. Participants were instructed in the technique of self‐sampling and asked to collect their own Pap smears. Colposcopic examinations were performed and biopsies taken, if indicated. Clinician‐collected Pap smears were performed 4 weeks later. Pairwise agreement was calculated between the outcomes of self‐collected, colposcopic, and clinician‐collected samples using the weighted κ statistic. Results Self‐collected Pap smear had a high level of acceptability among the women, all of whom were able to collect adequate tissue. The agreement of self‐collected Pap smears with colposcopic assessment was no worse than that of clinician‐collected Pap smears (Cohen's κ statistic 0.54 [95% CI, 0.27‐0.82]; cf 0.49 [0.2‐0.78], respectively). The specificity of self‐collected Pap smears was almost identical to that of clinician‐collected samples (specificity: 86% vs 81%, respectively). Direct comparison between patient and clinician collected Pap smears showed fair agreement (κ statistic 0.38 [0.07‐0.68]). There were no adverse events in either group. Conclusions Self‐collection of Pap smears is an effective and acceptable alternative to clinician‐collected samples and may provide a strategy for improving compliance with cervical testing programs.

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