AI Article Synopsis

  • Since 1995, Taiwan's annual cervical cytology testing for women aged 30 and older has led to a significant decline in cervical cancer cases and deaths.
  • The introduction of an HPV vaccination program for girls aged 13-15 in 2018 is expected to lower the effectiveness of current cytology tests, prompting a need for a shift to more sensitive HPV-based testing methods.
  • A panel of experts has provided policy recommendations for managing this transition, covering aspects like testing procedures, standards, and implementation, to sustain Taiwan's success in cervical cancer prevention.

Article Abstract

Since government-provided annual cervical cytology testing for all Taiwanese women aged 30 years or older became available in 1995, both cervical cancer incidence and death have decreased significantly. However, with the 2018 introduction of the national immunization program for human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccination in all schoolgirls aged 13-15 years old, the positive predictive value of cytology testing is expected to decrease with rising vaccination rates, and therefore a transition to more sensitive HPV-based testing may be needed. This position paper, derived from discussions by a panel of experts in cervical cancer screening, provides short-, medium-, and long-term policy recommendations to manage the transition between cervical screening methods for Taiwan. The recommendations include concrete suggestions regarding testing procedures, standards, accreditation, monitoring, promotion, and implementation. It is hoped that comprehensive preparation and management of this transition will enable Taiwan to repeat the previous successes of the cervical cytology testing program.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jfma.2023.06.018DOI Listing

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