Investigator

Irene A.M. van der Avoort

Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam

IAVIrene A.M. van de…
Papers(2)
HPV and DNA Methylati…High acceptability of…
Collaborators(10)
Ivonne MartinNienke E van TrommelP. J. TimmersRalf L. O. van de LaarRenske DM SteenbergenRianne van den HelderS. A. H. M. van den T…Ward HofhuisA. SalmaanC. C. E. Jordans
Institutions(6)
Vrije Universiteit Am…TergooiThe Netherlands Cance…Maasstad ZiekenhuisErasmus University Ro…Sint Franciscus Gasth…

Papers

HPV and DNA Methylation Testing in Urine for Cervical Intraepithelial Neoplasia and Cervical Cancer Detection

Abstract Purpose: Biomarker detection in urine offers a potential solution to increase effectiveness of cervical cancer screening programs by attracting nonresponders. In this prospective study, the presence of high-risk human papillomavirus (hrHPV) DNA and the performance of DNA methylation analysis was determined for the detection of cervical cancer and high-grade cervical intraepithelial neoplasia (CIN2/3) in urine, and compared with paired cervicovaginal self-samples and clinician-taken cervical scrapes. Experimental Design: A total of 587 samples were included from 113 women with cervical cancer, 92 women with CIN2/3, and 64 controls. Samples were tested for hrHPV DNA and five methylation markers. Univariate and multivariate logistic regression and leave-one-out cross-validation were used to determine the methylation marker performance for CIN3 and cervical cancer (CIN3+) detection in urine. Agreement between samples was determined using Cohen kappa statistics and the Spearman correlation coefficients. Results: HrHPV presence was high in all sample types, 79% to 92%. Methylation levels of all markers in urine significantly increased with increasing severity of disease. The optimal marker panel (ASCL1/LHX8) resulted in an AUC of 0.84 for CIN3+ detection in urine, corresponding to an 86% sensitivity at a 70% predefined specificity. At this threshold 96% (109/113) of cervical cancers, 68% (46/64) of CIN3, and 58% (14/24) of CIN2 were detected. Between paired samples, a strong agreement for HPV16/18 genotyping and a fair to strong correlation for methylation was found. Conclusions: HrHPV DNA and DNA methylation testing in urine offers a promising solution to detect cervical cancer and CIN2/3 lesions, especially for women currently unreached by conventional screening methods.

High acceptability of point‐of‐care HIV testing at the colposcopy outpatient clinic in hospitals in the Netherlands

AbstractObjectiveCervical cancer and its precursor are labeled as HIV indicator conditions, justifying the recommendation of HIV testing for all patients. This study aimed to assess the acceptance and patients' and gynecologists' perceptions on HIV testing in patients with cervical dysplasia at the colposcopy outpatient clinic in hospitals in the Netherlands.MethodsA cross‐sectional study was conducted between May 2021 and February 2023 to implement point‐of‐care HIV testing in five hospitals in the Rotterdam region, the Netherlands. We included patients aged 18 years and older, without documented HIV, presenting with cervical dysplasia. The primary outcome was the HIV test acceptance rate. Secondary outcomes were the HIV positivity rate and the association between dysplasia severity and test acceptance. We also assessed patients' and gynecologists' perspectives on this testing strategy with a questionnaire.ResultsOf 563 patients, 523 accepted HIV testing, resulting in a test acceptance rate of 92.9% (95% confidence interval, 90.45%–94.88%). Testing rates were consistent among participating hospitals (91.6%–100.0%) None of the patients tested positive for HIV. Severity of dysplasia was not associated with test acceptance (P = 0.768). Most patients (n = 500, 96.0%) reported good or higher experience with this testing strategy. The main barriers for gynecologists to offer HIV testing were lack of time (n = 22, 33.9%) and fear to offend a patient (n = 7, 12.5%). Less than half (n = 19, 39.3%) of gynecologists believed an HIV test should be offered to all patients with cervical dysplasia.ConclusionPoint‐of‐care HIV testing at colposcopy outpatient clinics was well accepted by patients. The data indicate that the primary barrier lies with the physicians to offer such testing.

2Papers
14Collaborators
1Trials