AI Article Synopsis

  • The review evaluates when cervical cancer screening should start and stop, highlighting that screening may not be useful for women under 20 due to low detection rates and many false positives.
  • It discusses the adverse effects of treatments for cervical lesions and that many early-stage HPV infections can resolve on their own, suggesting screening in younger women may actually do more harm.
  • For women aged 65 and older, the evidence shows that those who’ve been adequately screened may not need further screenings, and efforts should focus on those who haven't been screened properly.

Article Abstract

Despite the success of cervical cancer screening programs, questions remain about the appropriate time to begin and end screening. This review explores epidemiologic and contextual data on cervical cancer screening to inform decisions about when screening should begin and end. Cervical cancer is rare among women younger than 20 years. Screening for cervical cancer in this age group is complicated by lower rates of detection and higher rates of false-positive results than in older women. Methods used to diagnose and treat cervical intraepithelial neoplasia have important potential adverse effects. High-risk human papillomavirus infections and abnormalities on cytologic and histologic examination have relatively high rates of regression. Accordingly, cervical cancer screening in women younger than 20 years may be harmful. The incidence of, and mortality rates from, cervical cancer and the proportion of U.S. women aged 65 years or older who have had a Papanicolaou smear within 3 years have decreased since 2000. Available evidence supports discontinuation of cervical cancer screening among women aged 65 years or older who have had adequate screening and are not otherwise at high risk. Further reductions in the burden of cervical cancer in older women are probably best achieved by focusing on screening those who have not been adequately screened.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.7326/0003-4819-155-10-201111150-00377DOI Listing

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