Publications Date
Authors
Timothy Wilkin 1, Huichao Chen 2, Vikrant Sahasrabuddhe 3, Roy Matining 2, Rosie Mngqibisa 4, Lameck Chinula 5, Yamikani Mbilizi 6, Tsitsi Magure 7, Ayotunde E Omoz-Oarhe 8, Mohammed Rassool 9, Cynthia Riviere 10, Rhamesh Bhosale 11, Sheela Godbole 12, Reena Naranjo 13, Robert Coombs 14, Pamela Michelow 15, Catherine Godfrey 16, Cynthia Firnhaber 17
Journal
Clin Infect Dis
PMID
35294524
DOI
10.1093/cid/ciac213
Abstract

Background: Cytology-based cervical cancer screening followed by confirmation and treatment of biopsy-proven high-grade squamous intraepithelial (bHSIL), is difficult to implement in resource-constrained settings. We hypothesized that high-risk human papillomavirus (hrHPV) testing followed by immediate cryotherapy of women with hrHPV (HPV screen-and-treat) may improve outcomes.

Methods: Randomized, open-label, phase 2, multinational clinical trial enrolling women with HIV age 18 or older with cervical hrHPV and having no cervical lesions or lesions appropriate for cryotherapy. Women were randomized to immediate cryotherapy (Arm A) or cytology-based screening (Arm B). For Arm A, cervical biopsies were obtained followed by cervical cryotherapy, and in Arm B, women with abnormal cytology underwent colposcopy followed by loop electroexcision procedure (LEEP) if bHSIL was detected. Women were followed through 30 months. The primary outcome was time to bHSIL detected from Month 6 through study completion.

Results: 288 women (145 Arm A, 143, Arm B) were randomized: median age 35 years, 84% on antiretroviral therapy, median CD4 501 cells/mm3. In Arm A, 39 (27%) of women had bHSIL at entry, and in Arm B, 88 (62%) had abnormal cytology, 22 (15%) were diagnosed with bHSIL, 12 (8%) underwent LEEP. In follow-up, 30 (21%) and 31 (22%) developed bHSIL; time to bHSIL was similar between arms (p=0.94). The prevalence of hrHPV at Month 6 was similar between arms (61% and 70%, p=0.13).

Conclusion: HPV test-and-treat was not associated with improved bHSIL outcomes as compared to cytology-based screening. More effective treatment options are required to improve outcomes from screen-and-treat programs.