Investigator

S. Rachel Skinner

Clinical Stream (Medical) Director · Sydney Children’s Hospitals Network, Clinical Operations

SRSS. Rachel Skinner
Papers(1)
Could HPV Testing on …
Collaborators(4)
Jie-Bin LewJulia M. L. BrothertonMegan A. SmithMichaela Hall
Institutions(3)
The University Of Syd…The University of Syd…The University Of Mel…

Papers

Could HPV Testing on Self-collected Samples Be Routinely Used in an Organized Cervical Screening Program? A Modeled Analysis

Abstract Background: Cervical screening on self-collected samples has mainly been considered for targeted use in underscreened women. Updated evidence supports equivalent sensitivity of PCR-based human papillomavirus (HPV) testing on self-collected and clinician-collected samples. Methods: Using a well-established model, we compared the lifetime impact on cancer diagnoses and deaths resulting from cervical screening using self-collected samples only, with and without the existing restriction in Australia to women aged 30+ years and ≥2 years overdue, compared with the mainstream program of 5-yearly HPV screening on clinician-collected samples starting at 25 years of age. We conservatively assumed sensitivity of HPV testing on self-collected relative to clinician-collected samples was 0.98. Outcomes were estimated either in the context of HPV vaccination (“routinely vaccinated cohorts;” uptake as in Australia) or in the absence of HPV vaccination (“unvaccinated cohorts”). Results: In unvaccinated cohorts, the health benefits of increased participation from self-collection outweighed the worst case (2%) loss of relative test sensitivity even if only 15% of women, who would not otherwise attend, used it (“additional uptake”). In routinely vaccinated cohorts, population-wide self-collection could be marginally (0.2%–1.0%) less effective at 15% additional uptake but 6.2% to 12.4% more effective at 50% additional uptake. Most (56.6%–65.0%) of the loss in effectiveness in the restricted self-collection pathway in Australia results from the requirement to be 2 or more years overdue. Conclusions: Even under pessimistic assumptions, any potential loss in test sensitivity from self-collection is likely outweighed by improved program effectiveness resulting from feasible levels of increased uptake. Impact: Consideration could be given to offering self-collection more widely, potentially as an equal choice for women. See related commentary by Lim, p. 245

230Works
1Papers
4Collaborators

Positions

2024–

Clinical Stream (Medical) Director

Sydney Children’s Hospitals Network · Clinical Operations

2023–

Senior Staff Specialist

Sydney Children’s Hospitals Network · Adolescent Medicine

2007–

Professor in Child and Adolescent Health

University of Sydney · Child and Adolescent Health, Faculty of Medicine and Health

2017–

Senior Clinical Advisor in Youth Health

NSW Ministry of Health · Health and Social Policy Branch

Education

1999

Fellowship

Royal Australasian College of Physicians · Paediatrics

Country

AU

Keywords
HPVsexual and reproductive healthschool based programsimmunisationAdolescent healthSexualityGender diversity