Investigator

Steven Weyers

Ghent University Hospital

SWSteven Weyers
Papers(2)
Validation of BD Oncl…Clinical Accuracy of …
Collaborators(10)
Davy Vanden BroeckMarc ArbynPhilippe De SutterSeverien Van KeerWiebren TjalmaJean DoyenGilbert DondersAlex VorstersArdashel LatsuzbaiaEliana Peeters
Institutions(7)
Ghent University Hosp…University Of AntwerpGhent UniversityVrije Universiteit Br…University Of LigeAntwerp University Ho…Sciensano Belgium

Papers

Validation of BD Onclarity HPV Assay on Vaginal Self-Samples versus Cervical Samples Using the VALHUDES Protocol

Abstract Background: In this study, we evaluated accuracy of HPV testing on self-samples versus clinician-taken samples through the VALHUDES protocol. VALHUDES was designed as a diagnostic test accuracy study, where women referred to colposcopy collected self-samples followed by clinician-taken cervical samples. Methods: Four hundred eighty-five women recruited in five colposcopy clinics (median age = 40 years; IQR, 31–49) with valid results for all specimens were included in the main analysis: 230 vaginal self-samples were collected with Evalyn Brush and 255 with Qvintip. Cervical samples were taken by the gynecologist with the Cervex-Brush. HPV testing was performed with BD Onclarity HPV assay (Onclarity). Colposcopy and histology were used as the reference standard for accuracy estimation. Results: The sensitivity for CIN2+ on vaginal self-samples overall was not different from cervical samples (ratio = 0.96; 95% CI, 0.90–1.03), whereas specificity was significantly higher (ratio = 1.09; 95% CI, 1.02–1.16). However, the relative accuracy (self- vs. clinician sampling) differed by vaginal collection device: relative sensitivity and specificity ratios of 1.00 (95% CI, 0.94–1.06) and 1.15 (95% CI, 1.05–1.25), respectively for Evalyn-Brush; 0.91 (95% CI, 0.79–1.04) and 1.03 (95% CI, 0.95–1.13), respectively for Qvintip. Conclusions: Clinical accuracy of BD Onclarity HPV assay on vaginal self-samples was not different from cervical samples. Impact: VALHUDES study showed that HPV testing with Onclarity HPV on vaginal self-samples is similarly sensitive compared with cervical specimens. However, differences in accuracy by self-sampling devices, although not significant, were noted. Onclarity HPV testing on vaginal self-samples following validated collection and handling procedures may be used in primary cervical cancer screening.

2Papers
10Collaborators