HPV Testing Shows Which Pap Abnormalities Need AttentionNational Cancer Institute Testing for the human papillomavirus (HPV) may help doctors and patients decide what to do about the mildly abnormal and very common Pap test result known as ASCUS. Findings from a major, randomized, multicenter study by the National Cancer Institute (NCI) show that HPV testing is highly sensitive in identifying which Pap-detected abnormalities require immediate attention.
ALTS included about 5,000 women with mildly abnormal Pap tests. About two-thirds had ASCUS and about one-third had the more definite abnormality called LSIL, or low-grade squamous intraepithelial lesion. Within each of these categories, women were assigned randomly to three different groups. One group had an immediate colposcopy – a procedure in which a physician examines the cervix through a magnifying instrument and biopsies any abnormal areas. A second group had repeat Pap tests. The third group was assigned to HPV triage. In this triage group, patients' Pap specimens were tested for HPV types associated with cervical cancer. Those who were HPV-positive had an immediate colposcopy and biopsy and those who were HPV-negative did not. For the current study, the investigators analyzed the ALTS data from women who had been referred to colposcopy when they enrolled in the trial. The colposcopy results were compared to the results of HPV tests that patients also had on enrollment. The colposcopy results showed that about 5 percent to 10 percent of women with ASCUS had precancer or cancer and that, of these women, 96.3 percent had a positive HPV test. As a corollary, 99.5 percent of women with a negative HPV test did not have precancer or cancer. The investigators conclude that HPV testing can help in deciding what to do about ASCUS. "A positive test suggests that precancer or, rarely, cancer may be present -- we found precancers in 10 percent to 20 percent of ASCUS cases in which the HPV test was positive," said NCI's co-principal investigator, Mark Schiffman, M.D. "A negative test provides strong reassurance that precancer or cancer is not present." About 55 percent of women with ASCUS would have been referred to colposcopy if the HPV test had been used for triage in all cases. Thus, HPV testing reduced referrals to colposcopy by about a half compared to immediate colposcopy. ALTS was conducted at four major medical centers: the University of Alabama at Birmingham; the University of Oklahoma in Oklahoma City; Magee-Womens Hospital of the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center in Pittsburgh, Pa.; and the University of Washington in Seattle. It was organized and funded by the NCI, which is the U.S. government's principal agency for cancer research.
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