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Evaluation of an Isothermal Amplification HPV Assay on Self-Collected Vaginal Samples as Compared to Clinician-Collected Cervical Samples. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study assessed the agreement of HPV test results between self-collected samples and clinician-collected samples using two different HPV assays: Sentis (isothermal amplification) and Onclarity (PCR-based).
  • Among 104 women, the concordance rates were high, with 89.8% between Self-Sentis and Clinician-Sentis, and 84.4% between Self-Sentis and Clinician-Onclarity.
  • The findings showed that a significant number (65%) of participants found self-sampling to be acceptable, mainly due to reduced embarrassment and convenience.

Article Abstract

This study aimed to evaluate the concordance of HPV results between the Sentis HPV assay (Sentis) (BGI Group, Shenzhen, China), an isothermal amplification-based HPV assay, on self-collected and clinician-collected samples and the agreement of Sentis on self-collected samples with the BD Onclarity HPV assay (Onclarity) (Becton, Dickinson, and Company, Franklin Lakes, New Jersey, USA), a PCR-based HPV assay, on clinician-collected samples. This was a prospective study of 104 women attending the colposcopy clinic for abnormal smears. After informed consent, participants self-collected vaginal samples before having clinician-collected cervical samples. Self-collected samples underwent HPV testing with Sentis (Self-Sentis HPV) and clinician-collected samples were tested with Sentis (Clinician-Sentis HPV) and Onclarity (Clinician-Onclarity), which was used as a reference standard. The concordance was assessed using Cohen's kappa. The prevalence of HPV and the acceptability of self-sampling were also evaluated. The concordance rate between Self-Sentis HPV and Clinician-Sentis HPV was 89.8% with a kappa of 0.769. The concordance rate between Self-Sentis HPV and Clinician-Onclarity was 84.4% with a kappa of 0.643. The prevalence of HPV was 26.0% on Clinician-Onclarity, 29.3% on Clinician-Sentis HPV, and 35.6% on Self-Sentis HPV. Overall, 65% of participants would undergo self-sampling again. This was attributed to mainly not feeling embarrassed (68%) and being convenient (58%). Our study showed a substantial agreement between Self-Sentis HPV with Clinician-Sentis HPV and Clinician-Onclarity. Self-sampling was also shown to be a generally well-accepted method of screening.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10647996PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/diagnostics13213297DOI Listing

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