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. 2007 Mar 1;14(1):34–42. doi: 10.1258/096914107780154486

Human papillomavirus testing by self-sampling: assessment of accuracy in an unsupervised clinical setting

Anne Szarewski 1, Louise Cadman 2, Susan Mallett 3, Janet Austin 4, Philip Londesborough 5, Jo Waller 6, Jane Wardle 7, Douglas G Altman 8, Jack Cuzick 9
PMCID: PMC4109399  PMID: 17362570

Abstract

Objectives: To compare the performance and acceptability of unsupervised self-sampling with clinician sampling for high-risk human papillomavirus (HPV) types for the first time in a UK screening setting.

Setting: Nine hundred and twenty women, from two demographically different centres, attending for routine cervical smear testing

Methods: Women performed an unsupervised HPV self-test. Immediately afterwards, a doctor or nurse took an HPV test and cervical smear. Women with an abnormality on any test were offered colposcopy.

Results: Twenty-one high-grade and 39 low-grade cervical intraepithelial neoplasias (CINs) were detected. The sensitivity for high-grade disease (CIN2+) for the self HPV test was 81% (95% confidence interval [CI] 60–92), clinician HPV test 100% (95% CI 85–100), cytology 81% (95% CI 60–92). The sensitivity of both HPV tests to detect high- and low-grade cervical neoplasia was much higher than that of cytology (self-test 77% [95%CI 65–86], clinician test 80% [95% CI 68–88], cytology 48% [95% CI 36–61]). For both high-grade alone, and high and low grades together, the specificity was significantly higher for cytology (greater than 95%) than either HPV test (between 82% and 87%). The self-test proved highly acceptable to women and they reported that the instructions were easy to understand irrespective of educational level.

Conclusions: Our results suggest that it would be reasonable to offer HPV self-testing to women who are reluctant to attend for cervical smears. This approach should now be directly evaluated among women who have been non-attenders in a cervical screening programme.


Articles from Journal of Medical Screening are provided here courtesy of SAGE Publications

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