Investigator

Samuel Seery

Module Leader · Arden University, Department of Health and Care Management

About

SSSamuel Seery
Papers(2)
Genotype, cervical in…Improving colposcopic…
Collaborators(2)
Peng XueYoulin Qiao
Institutions(2)
Lancaster UniversityChinese Academy Of Me…

Papers

Genotype, cervical intraepithelial neoplasia, and type‐specific cervical intraepithelial neoplasia distributions in hrHPV+ cases referred to colposcopy: A multicenter study of Chinese mainland women

AbstractTo investigate age and type‐specific prevalences of high‐risk human papillomavirus (hrHPV) and cervical intraepithelial neoplasia (CIN) in hrHPV+ women referred to colposcopy. This is a retrospective, multicenter study. Participants were women referred to one of seven colposcopy clinics in China after testing positive for hrHPV. Patient characteristics, hrHPV genotyping, colposcopic impressions, and histological diagnoses were abstracted from electronic records. Main outcomes were age‐related type‐specific prevalences associated with hrHPV and CIN, and colposcopic accuracy. Among 4419 hrHPV+ women referred to colposcopy, HPV 16, 52, and 58 were the most common genotypes. HPV 16 prevalence was 39.96%, decreasing from 42.57% in the youngest group to 30.81% in the eldest group. CIN3+ prevalence was 15.00% and increased with age. As lesion severity increases, HPV16 prevalence increased while the prevalence of HPV 52 and 58 decreased. No age‐based trend was identified with HPV16 prevalence among CIN2+, and HPV16‐related CIN2+ was less common in women aged 60 and above (44.26%) compared to those younger than 60 years (59.61%). Colposcopy was 0.73 sensitive at detecting CIN2+ (95% confidence interval[CI]: 0.71, 0.75), with higher sensitivity (0.77) observed in HPV16+ women (95% CI: 0.74, 0.80) compared to HPV16− women (0.68, 95% CI: 0.64, 0.71). Distributions of hrHPV genotypes, CIN, and type‐specific CIN in Chinese mainland hrHPV+ women referred to colposcopy were investigated for the first time. Distributions were found to be age‐dependent and colposcopic performance appears related to HPV genotypes. These findings could be used to improve the management of women referred to colposcopy.

Improving colposcopic accuracy for cervical precancer detection: a retrospective multicenter study in China

Abstract Background Colposcopy alone can result in misidentification of high-grade squamous intraepithelial or worse lesions (HSIL +), especially for women with Type 3 transformation zone (TZ) lesions, where colposcopic assessment is particularly imprecise. This study aimed to improve HSIL + case identification by supplementing referral screening results to colposcopic findings. Methods This is an observational multicenter study of 2,417 women, referred to colposcopy after receiving cervical cancer screening results. Logistic regression analysis was conducted under uni- and multivariate models to identify factors which could be used to improve HSIL + case identification. Histological diagnosis was established as the gold standard and is used to assess accuracy, sensitivity, and specificity, as well as to incrementally improve colposcopy. Results Multivariate analysis highlighted age, TZ types, referral screening, and colposcopists’ skills as independent factors. Across this sample population, diagnostic accuracies for detecting HSIL + increased from 72.9% (95%CI 71.1–74.7%) for colposcopy alone to 82.1% (95%CI 80.6–83.6%) after supplementing colposcopy with screening results. A significant increase in colposcopic accuracy was observed across all subgroups. Although, the highest increase was observed in women with a TZ3 lesion, and for those diagnosed by junior colposcopists. Conclusion It appears possible to supplement colposcopic examinations with screening results to improve HSIL + detection, especially for women with TZ3 lesions. It may also be possible to improve junior colposcopists’ diagnoses although, further psychological research is necessary. We need to understand how levels of uncertainty influence diagnostic decisions and what the concept of “experience” actually is and what it means for colposcopic practice.

85Works
2Papers
2Collaborators
Uterine Cervical NeoplasmsGraft vs Host DiseasePapillomavirus InfectionsCarcinoma in SituCarcinoma, Squamous Cell

Positions

2025–

Module Leader

Arden University · Department of Health and Care Management

2021–

Managing Editor

Nanjing Medical University · Journal of Biochemical Research

2016–

Senior lecturer of EBM

Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences & Peking Union Medical College · Graduate School

2024–

Associate

Newcastle University · School of Pharmacy

Education

2028

EdD in Executive Health Care Management

University of Sheffield · School of Education

2023

MBA

Newcastle University Business School · Humanities and Social Sciences

Country

GB