Investigator

Marianne Hyer

Information Management Services

MHMarianne Hyer
Papers(1)
Impact of repeatedly …
Collaborators(5)
Nancy PoitrasPhilip E CastleThomas LoreyBrian BefanoLi C Cheung
Institutions(5)
Information Managemen…Kaiser PermanenteDepartment Of Health …University Of Washing…National Cancer Insti…

Papers

Impact of repeatedly screening negative on cervical cancer risk

Abstract Background We demonstrated that cervical cancer risk following any screening result is lower if there is a known prior negative screening history vs an unknown screening history. We extended these findings to look at how screening performs following repeatedly negative screening results. Methods Approximately 1.7 million women aged 30-64 years underwent triennial human papillomavirus (HPV) and cytology co-testing from 2003 to 2021. We modeled 5-year risks of cervical intraepithelial neoplasia grade 3 or more severe diagnoses (CIN3+) and invasive cervical cancer for the initial co-test, and then successive rounds following negative co-testing. A logistic-Weibull prevalence-incidence model was used to model risks. Results HPV test positivity was greater than cytology positivity for only the first co-test, and both positivity rates decreased with each screening round. Diagnostic yields of CIN3+ and cancer declined with each round of screening so the first screen yielded 8-fold more CIN3+ and invasive cancer than the fifth screen following 4 consecutive negative co-tests. Five-year risks of CIN3+ for positive and negative HPV and cytology results, individually or combined, decreased considerably after the first screen, with smaller decreases in each subsequent round. For cancer, we noticed a considerable decrease with the first screen only. Five-year CIN3+ risks were greater for positive HPV or cytology results, with a longer antecedent screening interval and younger age at screening (Ptrend < .001). Conclusions Triennial screening that includes HPV testing becomes inefficient after a single and more so after multiple negative screens. These data support the use of longer screening intervals, especially following negative screen(s).

1Papers
5Collaborators