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Strategies to accelerate the elimination of cervical cancer in British Columbia, Canada: a modelling study. | LitMetric

Strategies to accelerate the elimination of cervical cancer in British Columbia, Canada: a modelling study.

CMAJ

Cancer Control Research (Pataky, Izadi-Najafabadi, Smith, Peacock), BC Cancer; Canadian Centre for Applied Research in Cancer Control (Pataky, Izadi-Najafabadi); Women's Health Research Institute (Smith, Ogilvie), BC Women's Hospital and Health Centre, Vancouver, BC; Karmanos Cancer Institute (Gottschlich), Wayne State University, Detroit Mich.; Faculty of Medicine (Ionescu, Proctor), University of British Columbia; Cervix Screening Program (Ionescu, Proctor), BC Cancer; School of Population and Public Health (Ogilvie), University of British Columbia; Faculty of Health Sciences (Peacock), Simon Fraser University, Vancouver, BC.

Published: June 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • The Canadian Partnership Against Cancer aims to eliminate cervical cancer in Canada by 2040, focusing on increasing HPV vaccination, implementing HPV-based screening, and improving follow-up care after abnormal results.
  • A microsimulation model, OncoSim-Cervical, was used to explore the effects of these priorities on cervical cancer elimination timelines specifically for British Columbia.
  • Current HPV-based screening could eliminate cervical cancer by 2034, but with improved participation and follow-up, this could be accelerated to as early as 2031; enhancing vaccination has less of an impact on the timeline.

Article Abstract

Background: To eliminate cervical cancer in Canada by 2040, defined as an annual age-standardized incidence rate (ASIR) lower than 4.0 per 100 000 women, the Canadian Partnership Against Cancer (CPAC) identified 3 priorities for action: increasing human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccine coverage, implementing HPV-based screening and increasing screening participation, and improving follow-up after abnormal screen results. Our objective was to explore the impact of these priorities on the projected time to elimination of cervical cancer in British Columbia.

Methods: We used OncoSim-Cervical, a microsimulation model led and supported by CPAC and developed by Statistics Canada that simulates HPV transmission and the natural history of cervical cancer for the Canadian population. We updated model parameters to reflect BC's historical participation rates and program design. We simulated the transition to HPV-based screening and developed scenarios to explore the additional impact of achieving 90% vaccination coverage, 95% screening recruitment, 90% ontime screening, and 95% follow-up compliance. We projected cervical cancer incidence, ASIR, and year of elimination for the population of BC for 2023-2050.

Results: HPV-based screening at current vaccination, participation, and follow-up rates can eliminate cervical cancer by 2034. Increasing on-time screening and follow-up compliance could achieve this target by 2031. Increasing vaccination coverage has a small impact over this time horizon.

Interpretation: With the implementation of HPV-based screening, cervical cancer can be eliminated in BC before 2040. Efforts to increase screening participation and follow-up through this transition could potentially accelerate this timeline, but the transition from cytology- to HPV-based screening is fundamental to achieving this goal.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11142038PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1503/cmaj.231682DOI Listing

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