A cluster randomized controlled trial of visual, cytology and human papillomavirus screening for cancer of the cervix in rural India

Rengaswamy Sankaranarayanan(Centre international de recherche sur le cancer), Bhagwan M. Nene(Tata Memorial Hospital), Ketayun A. Dinshaw(Tata Memorial Hospital), Cédric Mahé(Centre international de recherche sur le cancer), Kasturi Jayant(Tata Memorial Hospital), Surendra S. Shastri(Tata Memorial Hospital), Sylla G. Malvi(Tata Memorial Hospital), Roshini Chinoy(Tata Memorial Hospital), Rohini Kelkar(Tata Memorial Hospital), Atul Budukh(Tata Memorial Hospital), Vijay R. Keskar(Tata Memorial Hospital), Raghevendra Rajeshwarker(Tata Memorial Hospital), Richard Muwonge(Centre international de recherche sur le cancer), Shubhada Kane(Tata Memorial Hospital), Donald Maxwell Parkin(Centre international de recherche sur le cancer)
International Journal of Cancer
April 7, 2005
Cited by 206Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

The impact of screening by visual inspection with acetic acid (VIA), cytology or HPV testing on cervical cancer incidence and mortality is investigated in a cluster randomized controlled trial in India. We report findings after the screening phase, when 52 clusters, with a total of 142,701 women aged 30-59 years in Osmanabad District, India, were randomized into 4 arms for a single round of screening by trained midwives with either VIA, cytology or HPV testing as well as a control group. All laboratory tests were done locally. Test-positive women underwent investigations (colposcopy/biopsy) and treatment in the base hospital. Data on participation, test positivity, positive predictive value and detection rates of cervical neoplasia were analyzed using cluster design methodology. Of the eligible women, 72-74% were screened. Test positivity rates were 14.0% for VIA, 7.0% for cytology and 10.3% for HPV. The detection rate of high-grade lesions was similar in all intervention arms (0.7% for VIA, 1.0% for cytology and 0.9% for HPV testing) (p = 0.06, Mann-Whitney test). While the detection rate for VIA dropped to 0.5% with declining test positivity during the course of the study, it remained constant for cytology and HPV testing. Over 85% of women with high-grade lesions received treatment. Our results show that a high level of participation and good-quality cytology can be achieved in low-resource settings. VIA is a useful alternative but requires careful monitoring. Detection rates obtained by HPV testing were similar to cytology, despite higher investments.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis