A DO-IT-YOURSELF smear test could enable millions of women in poorer countries to head off cervical cancer.
Eighty-five
per cent of cervical cancer cases occur in developing countries, where
screening for pre-cancerous changes is rare due to difficulties in
obtaining samples and a shortage of cytologists to interpret them.
Testing for DNA from the human papillomavirus (HPV) that causes the disease is an alternative method. A kit created by Qiagen of Gaithersburg, Maryland, enables women to take their own cell sample, which is then posted to a lab.
Fang-Hui
Zhao of Peking Union Medical College in Beijing, China, and colleagues
have now reviewed data from 13,000 women in China screened using
HPV-testing, traditional smear testing, or a method that uses acetic
acid.
Self-HPV
testing was the most effective at detecting early signs of cancer,
although there were some false positives - some women had HPV but
didn't have any signs of cervical cancer (JNCI: Journal of the National Institute of Cancer, DOI: 10.1093/jnci/djr532).
"Self-HPV testing has potential as a primary screening method for
women, regardless of their access to healthcare," says Zhao.
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