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Cervical cancer is caused by oncogenic, or "high-risk" (HR) human papillomavirus (HPV), and is the main cause of cancer-related death among Kenyan women. This malignancy is theoretically preventable through a combination of screening of adult women and treating those with cervical premalignancies and vaccination of children and adolescents against HPV infection. However, only 5% of Kenyan women are regularly screened, and only 14% have ever been screened, which in Kenya is done by a method known as Visual Inspection with Acetic Acid (VIA). Possible obstacles to current screening include long travel to clinics, high costs, poor sensitivity and specificity of VIA, the need for extensive training for VIA, variability among providers in their interpretation of VIA, lack of trained personnel, and others. In addition, while safe and effective HPV vaccines have been available for 15 years, very few (<1%) Kenyan children and adolescents have been vaccinated. Obstacles to vaccination include high costs, poor delivery infrastructure, lack of education, long travel to clinics, and others. The investigators began a community-based program in 2018 to develop a framework for eradication of cervical cancer by screening adult women and vaccinating female children. This program is becoming accepted in the Webuye region of Western Kenya, but there is still a great deal to learn.
Going forward, this initiative will be known as the Kenya Mother-Daughter Cervical Cancer Eradication Program, or the Mother-Daughter Program (MDP) for short. The investigators propose a continuation of the MDP that will allow them to accumulate additional data needed to solidify the overall project and to answer additional questions as described below. To accomplish this goal the investigators will first enroll an additional 300 adult women to the program. This will increase the strength of the analysis of HR-HPV testing in detecting premalignant lesions of the cervix, especially in HIV-infected women. Second, the investigators will identify the positive and negative features of the MDP from the viewpoint of both the adult women and the girls enrolled in the program. Third, because anogenital warts (AGWs) may serve as a reservoir for HR-HPV, especially in women living with HIV/AIDS, the investigators will examine the prevalence, HPV type distribution, and treatment of these lesions among adult women participating in the MDP.
Full description
Strategies based on centralized care have been unsuccessful in preventing cervical cancer in Kenyan women. HR-HPV DNA testing of self-collected vaginal swabs is acceptable and feasible, and the investigators have now shown that such testing can occur in a community setting in rural Kenya; other groups have demonstrated similar successes in Africa. In studies funded by MISP awards, the investigators have shown that essentially all women invited to community meetings agreed to enroll in the studies, to receive education about cervical cancer, and to provide a self-collected vaginal swab for HR-HPV DNA testing. Nearly all women who attended the community meetings were also willing to have their female children vaccinated against HPV. The investigators have also shown that HPV vaccine can be delivered to western Kenya and can be administered to girls in a community setting. The investigators wish to continue to use this framework in the next MISP to further study the utility of this strategy and to address research questions that will elucidate the barriers to participation and will begin to provide information about the impact of the program.
To accomplish this goal, and an additional 300 adult women will be enrolled into the program. This will increase the strength of the proposed analysis of HR-HPV testing in detecting premalignant lesions of the cervix, especially in HIV-infected women. Second, investigators will identify the positive and negative features of the MDP from the viewpoint of both the adult women and the girls enrolled in the program. Third, because anogenital warts (AGWs) may serve as a reservoir for HR-HPV, especially in women living with HIV/AIDS, investigators will examine the prevalence, HPV type distribution, and treatment of these lesions among adult women participating in the MDP.
Thus these aims build on the infrastructure the investigators have created in the first two MISP award cycles. The investigators believe the MDP, a community based approach to cervical cancer, can become the standard for western Kenya, act as a framework for HPV-associated cancer control, and can lead to a significant improvement in patient care as well as providing an opportunity for hypothesis driven research.
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Kenyan Adult Women
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Kenyan Girls
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2,300 participants in 2 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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