Cervical
Cancer Screening Guidelines Updated
Women Over Age 30
Receive New Recommendation
New evidence supports
existing recommendations that Pap tests be performed only once
every three years for women who are at a low risk for cervical
cancer.
For women over the
age of 30 who have already had negative annual Pap tests at
least three years in a row, extending the interval between tests
increases the risk of cervical cancer only by about three in
100,000 women, says a report in the New England Journal
of Medicine.
The Pap test, which
detects abnormalities in cells before they actually become cancer,
is the most widely used cancer-screening test in the US. More
than 80 percent of women get the test in any two-year period
and more than 90 percent have been screened at least once.
Since the test was
adopted in the 1960s, the number of deaths from cervical cancer
have dropped dramatically.
Guidelines
Set, But Opinion Varies
Guidelines from the
American Cancer Society and the American
College of Obstetrics and Gynecology recommend that
low-risk women - those over the age of 30 with previous negative
tests - get Pap tests less often than annually.
Experts say that many
physicians still offer tests more frequently, however.
"Reasons are myriad,
including the lack of information on risk," says study author
Dr. George F. Sawaya, an associate professor of obstetrics,
gynecology, and reproductive sciences at the University of California
at San Francisco.
The information in
the current study, he adds, can be used by physicians and patients
to make decisions about how often to screen.
Dr. Sawaya and his
colleagues looked at about 1.2 million records from the National
Breast and Cervical Cancer Early Detection Program,
which is administered by the Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention (CDC) and has provided screening to
low-income, under-insured, or uninsured women in the US since
1991.
The researchers looked
at the number of positive Pap tests and then calculated the
estimated cancer risk.
The estimated extra
risk of cancer for women ages 30 to 44 who have had three consecutive
negative tests was two in 100,000 women, for women ages 45 to
59 it was one in 100,000, and for women 60 to 64 years it was
one in 100,000.
The overall cancer
risk in each group would then be five in 100,000, two in 100,000,
and one in 100,000 respectively. Having annual Pap tests produced
no difference in the oldest age group.
The prevalence of
cancer decreased as the number of previous negative tests accumulated.
Although the risk per woman is small, the overall numbers are
larger.
"Five per 100,000
cancers missed with tri-annual screening is small, but when
you look at the population, that's 500 extra cancers. That's
not so small," says Dr. Giuseppe Del Priore, an associate clinical
professor of gynecologic oncology at New York University School
in New York City.
There are also other
advantages to going in for an annual Pap smear, Dr. Del Priore
says.
"To consider a Pap
smear a 30-second technical intervention that takes place in
some kind of automated void is mistaken," he says. "When a woman
who goes to a doctor says everything's fine, she doesn't mean
just the Pap smear's fine. She means the blood pressure, weight,
tobacco, and vaccination."
Women
Advised to See Physician
Still, Dr. Sawaya
and others believe the frequency of screening can be reduced
for many, but not all, women.
"The information [in
the current study] only applies to women over the age of 30
who have had three annual negative Pap smears," says Dr. Sarah
Feldman, author of an accompanying editorial and director of
the Pap smear evaluation center at Brigham and Women's Hospital
in Boston. "It does not apply to the general population."
Dr. Sawaya advises,
"Individual women should first and foremost speak with their
clinicians to see if they are indeed good candidates for less
screening if they desire to be screened less often than annually."
Always consult your
physician for a diagnosis.
Online
Resources
(Our Organization
is not responsible for the content of Internet sites.)
American
Cancer Society
Centers
for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)
College
of Obstetrics and Gynecology
HealthierUS.Gov
National
Institutes of Health (NIH)
National
Women's Health Information Center
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December 2003
Cervical
Cancer Screening Guidelines Updated
Guidelines
Set, But Opinion Varies
Women
Advised to See Physician
Who
Should Have Pap Tests?
Online
Resources
Who
Should Have Pap Tests?
A woman should always
consult with her physician about when and how often a Pap test
and pelvic examination should be performed.
According to the National
Cancer Institute (NCI), the American Cancer
Society (ACS), and the American College of
Obstetrics (ACOG), general guidelines include:
-
Cervical cancer screening
should begin approximately three years after a woman begins
having sexual intercourse, but no later than at 21 years
old.
-
Experts recommend waiting
approximately three years following the initiation of
sexual activity because transient human papillomavirus
(HPV) infections and cervical cell changes that are not
significant are common and it takes years for a significant
abnormality or cancer to develop. Cervical cancer is extremely
rare in women under the age of 25.
-
Women should have a Pap test
at least once every three years.
-
The ACS
and ACOG recommend annual cervical cytology
screening with regular Pap tests or biannual (every two
years) screening with liquid-based tests (Thinprep) until
age 30. Women under age 30 have a higher likelihood than
older women of acquiring high-risk types of HPV that cause
premalignant cervical disease, which should be ruled out
before extending the testing intervals.
-
ACS and
ACOG recommend that at or after age 30,
women who have had three normal test results in a row
may get screened every two to three years. However, women
with certain risk factors such as human immunodeficiency
virus (HIV) infection, a weak immune system, in utero
DES exposure, or a previous diagnosis of cervical cancer
may need more frequent screening.
-
Women 65 to 70 years of age
who have had at least three normal Pap tests and no abnormal
Pap tests in the last 10 years may decide, upon consultation
with their healthcare provider, to stop cervical cancer
screening.
-
Women who have had a total
hysterectomy (removal of the uterus and cervix) do not
need to undergo cervical cancer screening, unless the
surgery was done as a treatment for cervical precancer
or cancer.
Women should seek
expert medical advice about when they should begin screening,
how often they should be screened, and when they can discontinue
cervical screenings, especially if they are at higher than average
risk of cervical cancer due to factors such as HIV infection.
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