Investigator

Bram Packet

PhD fellow · KU Leuven, Development and Regeneration

Research Interests

BPBram Packet
Papers(2)
Association between p…p16/Ki-67 dual stain,…
Institutions(1)
Universitair Ziekenhu…

Papers

Association between p16/Ki-67 dual stain cytology results prior to and 6 months after LLETZ treatment for CIN and the follow-up regimen three years after treatment: a retrospective cohort study

Investigate the association between p16/Ki-67 dual stain cytology test (DST) results, obtained prior to- and 6 months after LLETZ surgery for treatment of CIN, and the follow-up regimen three years after treatment. Secondary analysis of a prospective cohort study. Cervical cytology samples were obtained just prior to- and 6 months after LLETZ and underwent conventional liquid-based cytology (LBC) and p16/Ki-67 dual staining, as well as high-risk HPV genotyping. Clinical management after the LLETZ was according to Belgian national guidelines, with clinicians being blinded to DST results at both time points. Case records were reviewed in 01/2023 to document the follow-up regimen on average three years afterwards: women had either been advised to return to routine screening (i.e., three-annual LBC testing according to the Belgian guideline at that time), or were still subject to more frequent posttreatment surveillance (i.e., more frequent visits because of persistent hrHPV infection or absence of cytological regression). The follow-up regimen was recorded in 79/110 women originally recruited (72%). The need for continued intense posttreatment surveillance was associated with hrHPV infection 6 months after treatment (79.3% vs. 18.0%, p < 0.001), a positive DST result at baseline and follow-up (41.4% vs. 84.0%, p < 0.001-55.2% vs. 16.0%, p < 0.001), and persistent cytological anomalies at 6 months (at an ASCUS or worse threshold, 37.9% vs. 16.0%, p = 0.028). In multivariable logistic regression analysis, a positive DST at baseline (aOR 20.1, 95%CI 2.03-199.1) was independently associated with the need for intense post-treatment surveillance multiple years after treatment. This exploratory study suggests a possible role of dual-stain cytology in predicting treatment outcome multiple years after LLETZ surgery.

p16/Ki-67 dual stain, PAP cytology and HR-HPV test results prior to and 6 months after a LLETZ procedure: a prospective observational cohort study

To investigate the effect of a LLETZ procedure on p16/Ki-67 dual stain, PAP cytology and HR-HPV test results on cervical cytology samples obtained prior to and 6 months after the procedure. Secondary aims are to assess dependency between test results at the time of follow-up and explore dual stain positivity rates according to known risk factors for persistence/recurrence of cervical intra-epithelial neoplasia (CIN). Prospective observational cohort study conducted in the Department of Gynaecology at the University Hospitals of Leuven, Belgium. All patients referred for a LLETZ procedure were invited to participate. A cervical cytology sample was obtained just prior to and 6 months after the procedure. Every sample was used for PAP staining (cytology), p16/Ki-67 dual staining (dual stain test, DST) and HR-HPV genotyping. Test results were compared between both timepoints using the McNemar test. Dependency was assessed cross-sectionally at the time of follow-up using a chi-squared test. From the 110 participants originally included, 83 attended follow-up (75.5%). Mean duration of follow-up was 187.91 days (SD 21.47) and mean age was 41.4 years (SD 11.08). DST positivity rates were 70.9 and 30.1% prior to and 6 months after the procedure (p < 0.001). HR-HPV testing (positive or negative) and abnormal PAP cytology (evaluated at an ASCUS or worse threshold) showed a similar significant reduction in positivity rates (84.5 vs 42.2% and 72.7 vs 28.9%, respectively, p < 0.001). Results of all three assays showed high dependency at the time of follow-up (DST and PAP, PAP and HR-HPV test, DST and HR-HPV test-p values < 0.001). The highest proportion of positive DST results was seen in patients carrying HPV16 (84.6%), followed by any HR-HPV type (60%), those treated for CIN2 + (27.3%) and those with positive margins on the cone specimen (26.7%). A LLETZ procedure results in a significant decrease in abnormal DST, PAP cytology and HR-HPV test results in this diverse cohort of patients. The highest proportion of abnormal DST results was seen in patients carrying HR-HPV at the time of follow-up, especially HPV 16.

15Works
2Papers
Uterine Cervical NeoplasmsPuerperal DisordersRectal DiseasesPelvic Floor DisordersCytodiagnosisAnus Diseases

Positions

2021–

PhD fellow

KU Leuven · Development and Regeneration