Investigator

Joacim Meneses-León

Asistente de investigador · Instituto Nacional de Salud Pública, Centro de Investigación en Evaluación y Encuestas

JMJoacim Meneses-Le…
Papers(1)
Clinical Performance …
Institutions(1)
Universidad Nacional …

Papers

Clinical Performance of hrHPV Primary Screening Using Vaginal versus Cervical Samples to Detect High-grade Intraepithelial Lesions

Abstract High-risk human papillomavirus (hrHPV) testing is now the most recommended primary method for cervical cancer screening worldwide. Clinician-collected cervical sampling continues to be the main sampling method, but hrHPV vaginal self-sampling is an appealing alternative because of its greater acceptability and potentially higher cost-effectiveness. This study aimed to determine whether hrHPV vaginal self-sampling is comparable with clinician-collected cervical sampling for detecting histologically confirmed high-grade cervical intraepithelial neoplasia (CIN2/3) as part of a cervical cancer screening program in Mexico. We analyzed data from 5,856 women screened during a hrHPV-based screening study. Clinical performance and diagnostic efficiency metrics were estimated for the two sampling methods for the CIN3 and CIN2+ endpoints, using three triage strategies: HPV16/18 genotyping, HPV16/18/33/58 extended genotyping, and HPV16/18/31/33/58 extended genotyping. hrHPV-positivity was found in 801 (13.7%) cervical and 897 (15.3%) vaginal samples. All women with hrHPV-positive samples were referred to colposcopy, which detected 17 total CIN3 cases before considering retrospective triage strategies. Using the HPV16/18/31/33/58 extended genotyping strategy, 245 women had hrHPV-positive cervical samples and 269 had hrHPV-positive vaginal samples. Ten CIN3 cases were detected each among women with hrHPV-positive cervical samples and among those with hrHPV-positive vaginal samples when using this strategy, with no significant differences in sensitivity and specificity observed. We observe that self- and clinician-collected sampling methods are comparable for detecting CIN3 and CIN2+ regardless of the triage strategy used. These findings can help public health officials to develop more cost-effective cervical cancer screening programs that maximize participation. Prevention Relevance: We found that hrHPV vaginal self-sampling is comparable with hrHPV clinician cervical sampling when using any triage strategy to refer women to colposcopy, so self-sampling is a viable cervical screening method. Therefore, policymakers should consider incorporating self-sampling into cervical screening programs to increase screening coverage and reduce cervical cancer burden. See related Spotlight, p. 649

15Works
1Papers

Positions

2019–

Asistente de investigador

Instituto Nacional de Salud Pública · Centro de Investigación en Evaluación y Encuestas

2018–

Asistente de investigador

Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México · Centro de Investigación en Políticas, Población y Salud

2014–

Coordinador de campo

Instituto Nacional de Salud Pública · Centro de Investigación en Salud Poblacional

2012–

Nutriólogo Jurisdiccional

Servicios de Salud de Oaxaca · Coordinación de Epidemiología

2009–

Asistente de investigador

Instituto Mexicano del Seguro Social · Unidad de Investigación Epidemiológica y en Servicios de Salud

Education

2018

Maestría en Ciencias de la Salud con énfasis en Epidemiología

Instituto Nacional de Salud Pública · Escuela de Salud Pública de México

2009

Licenciado en Nutrición

Universidad Autónoma de Tlaxcala · Facultad de Ciencias de la Salud