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Cervical Cancer Screening With Human Papillomavirus Testing (ESTAMPA)

I

International Agency for Research on Cancer

Status

Active, not recruiting

Conditions

CIN2
CIN3
Cervical Cancer

Treatments

Other: HPV screening

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT01881659
IEC 12-27

Details and patient eligibility

About

HPV testing for primary cervical cancer screening of women over 30 years of age is likely to become the standard of care in the near future in many areas of the world. Its high sensitivity can significantly improve the effectiveness of screening programs and its prolonged negative predictive value can allow extension of screening intervals. However, a single HPV test has low positive predictive value and can lead to unnecessary workup and over-treatment and generate unnecessary distress. This multi-centric study will screen 50,000 women with HPV testing and compare several triage approaches that can follow HPV testing in order to make an HPV-based screening programme efficient, affordable and sustainable.

Full description

The study will be conducted in several Latin American countries. Currently, the study has started in one site in Colombia and soon another site in Mexico will start. In each participating center, women aged 30-64 years who are attending clinics for cervical screening will be invited to participate in the study. Women who agree to participate and sign the corresponding Institutional Review Board (IRB) approved consent forms will undergo a pelvic examination, and cervical cells for primary screening and triage will be collected. Recruitment specimens will be used for primary screening with an established HPV DNA test (Food and Drug Administration FDA approved). All women who are HPV-positive by the recruitment test will be referred for a standardized colposcopy examination for diagnosis. At the colposcopy visit, but before colposcopy is performed, a risk factor interview will be administered and participants will undergo visual inspection of the cervix with acetic acid (VIA) and collection of additional cervical cells and a blood specimen. The results of VIA will not be disclosed to the colposcopist. During colposcopy, the colposcopists will obtain (2-4) biopsies from any abnormally-appearing areas to ascertain neoplastic outcomes (CIN3+) and to direct treatment as required. All women who attend colposcopy will have a second round of HPV testing approximately 18 months after recruitment and those who are HPV-positive will be referred to colposcopy for final diagnosis. Data management and study supervision will be the responsibility of the International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) and the local Principal Investigators, most of whom are experienced HPV researchers.

The combined number of histologically-confirmed diagnoses of CIN3+, including CIN2 lesions positive for p16, (estimated n=500) will be the outcome of primary interest for evaluation of the performance of the various triage modalities. Our initial analyses will focus on comparisons of triage strategies that employ a single method: VIA, conventional/liquid-based cytology, HPV DNA genotyping, HPV RNA detection, detection of E6 proteins of high risk HPV types, or markers of HPV-induced cell-cycle alterations (e.g., p16, ki67, etc). To the extent possible, molecular testing for HPV triage will be carried out on the recruitment specimens to simulate a 'reflex testing' approach wherein screening and triage are done on the same specimen without additional visits. Subsequent analyses will consider various alternative strategies that employ more than one triage methodology; e.g., HPV DNA genotyping followed by cytology. The effectiveness and costs of each alternative strategy will be assessed under various scenarios of feasibility, cost, and effectiveness.

Enrollment

50,000 estimated patients

Sex

Female

Ages

30 to 64 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Aged 30-64 years
  • Mentally competent to be able to understand the consent form
  • Able to communicate with study staff
  • Physically able to have a pelvic exam

Exclusion criteria

  • Reporting no previous sexual activity
  • History of cervical cancer
  • Previous treatment for cervical pre-cancer in the last six months
  • Hysterectomy
  • Plans to move out of the study area in the next 12 months
  • Screened for cervical cancer in the last 12 months (depending on local regulations)

Trial design

50,000 participants in 1 patient group

Women attending cervical screening
Description:
Women aged 30-64 years who signed informed consent and comply with inclusion and exclusion criteria.
Treatment:
Other: HPV screening

Trial contacts and locations

12

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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