Investigator

Ana Paula Martins Sebastião

Associate Professor · Universidade da Beira Interior, Mathematics

APMAna Paula Martins…
Papers(2)
Colposcopic Findings …Risk Factors for Pers…
Collaborators(5)
Rita Maira ZanineCarmen Marcondes RibasCibele Feroldi MaffiniDulcimary Dias Bitten…Luiz Martins Collaço
Institutions(3)
Universidade Norte Do…Universidade Federal …Faculdade Evanglica D…

Papers

Colposcopic Findings and Diagnosis in Low-Income Brazilian Women with ASC-H pap Smear Results

Abstract Objective To determine the accuracy of colposcopy findings in diagnosing cervical intraepithelial neoplasia (CIN) in women with an atypical squamous cells, cannot exclude high-grade squamous intraepithelial lesion (ASC-H) pap smear result and analyze whether the prevalence of HSIL and cancer correlates with sociodemographic risk factors and specific colposcopic findings. Methods Colposcopic findings and sociodemographic risk factors were analyzed as possible predictors of a CIN 2 or worse diagnosis in women with an ASC-H pap smear result. Results Accuracy of the colposcopic impression was 92%, sensitivity was 91.6%, and specificity was 93.1%, with a positive predictive value of 96.4% and negative predictive value of 84.3%. Diagnosis of CIN 2 or worse was more frequent in patients with a previous history of cervical dysplasia and pre-menopausal patients. Identification of major colposcopic findings, dense acetowhite epithelium, coarse mosaicism, and punctuation correlated significantly with CIN 2 or worse. Conclusion Colposcopy performed by an experienced examiner can accurately differentiate patients with CIN 1 or less from patients with CIN 2 or worse. Diagnosis of CIN 2 or worse was more frequent in patients with a previous history of cervical dysplasia and pre-menopausal patients. The degree of acetowhite changes was the best colposcopic feature to predict CIN2 or worse.

Risk Factors for Persistence or Recurrence of High-Grade Cervical Squamous Intraepithelial Lesions

ABSTRACT Objectives: to evaluate whether the colposcopic lesion size , age, kind of surgery, the status of the surgical margins and the expression of the p16 and Ki-67 immunomarkers are risk factors for persistence or recurrence of the lesion. Methods: a cross-sectional, observational, retrospective study of patients submitted to cold knife conization (CKC) or the loop electrosurgical excision procedure for cervical intraepithelial neoplasia 2 or 3. The colposcopic lesion size, age, surgical method, involvement of the surgical margins, and p16/Ki-67 immunomarker expression were analyzed in relation to lesion persistence and recurrence. Results: seventy-one women were treated with cold knife conization and 200 were treated with loop electrosurgical excision. Of these, 95 had cervical intraepithelial neoplasia 2, 173 had cervical intraepithelial neoplasia 3, 183 had free surgical margins, 76 had compromised margins, and 12 showed damage by processing artifact or fragments. Among the 76 cases with positive margins, 55, 11, and 10 showed endocervical margin involvement, ectocervical margin involvement, and both endocervial and ectocervical margin involvement, respectively. Of the 264 followed-up patients, 38 had persistent or recurrent disease. A multiple logistic regression indicated that positive endocervical margins are the only independent risk factor for the persistence/recurrence of cervical intraepithelial neoplasia. No significant association was identified between the colposcopic lesion size, age, surgery type, or p16/Ki-67 immunomarker expression and lesion persistence or recurrence.

27Works
2Papers
5Collaborators

Positions

2021–

Associate Professor

Universidade da Beira Interior · Mathematics

2005–

Assistant Professor

University of Beira Interior · Matehatics

1998–

Lecturer

University of Beira Interior · Matehmatics

Education

2005

PhD

Universidade da Beira Interior · Mathematics

2002

Master

Universidade de Coimbra · Mathematics

1998

BSc

University of Coimbra · Mathematics

Country

PT

Keywords
Extreme Value Theory
Links & IDs
0000-0002-2993-577X

Scopus: 56362393000

Researcher Id: N-9824-2013