AI Article Synopsis

  • The study addresses the lack of a protocol for classifying patients with persistent HPV and cervical canal stenosis, highlighting significant underdiagnosis in cytology and colposcopy results, especially with a type 3 transformation zone.* ! -
  • A retrospective analysis of 1,021 conizations at a hospital in Germany found that 8.7% were diagnostic excisions, revealing high-grade abnormalities in over half of the patients studied.* ! -
  • The findings underscore the importance of diagnostic conization in patients with cervical stenosis and HPV issues, as it can help identify serious conditions like high-grade cervical intraepithelial neoplasia and early-stage cervical carcinoma.* !

Article Abstract

Aim: There is currently no protocol for classifying patients with HPV persistence and preoperative stenosis of the cervical canal. This has a significant impact on cytology results, colposcopy results and the possibility of obtaining reliable cervical histology outcomes. Our analysis clearly shows that colposcopy and cytology underestimate the histological results in patients with limited visibility due to the presence of a type 3 transformation zone (TZ). Our analysis revealed a significant discrepancy between the colposcopy and cytology results and the histological outcomes. Insufficient colposcopy led to the underdiagnosis of dysplastic lesions in patients with a type 3 TZ and cervical stenosis. In the case of repeated cytological abnormalities and inadequate colposcopy examination, it is crucial to perform a diagnostic conization to exclude high-grade dysplastic changes and cervical carcinoma.

Methods: We conducted a retrospective analysis of 1,021 conizations performed in tertiary care hospital in Wolfsburg, Germany between 2014 and 2020. Of these surgical procedures, 89 were diagnostic conizations. In our analysis, we defined diagnostic conization as a procedure performed when there is HPV persistence and repeated cytologic abnormalities in combination with a type 3 TZ, and when it is not possible to retrieve a relevant cervical histology sample.

Results: In this period, 8.7% of all conizations were diagnostic excisions. We found histological abnormalities in 48 of 89 patients (53.9%). The histological examination of the excised cone revealed high-grade cervical intraepithelial neoplasia (CIN/HSIL) in 9 patients (10.1%) and CIN 2+ (HSIL) in 23 out of the 89 patients (25.8%). Two cases of early-stage cervical carcinoma (FIGO IA1 and FIGO IA2) were confirmed (2.3%).

Conclusion: Patients with cervical stenosis, high-risk HPV persistence and repeated cytological abnormalities are at high risk of undetected high-grade cervical dysplasia. Histologic confirmation must be ensured in this patient consultation and this can be achieved by performing diagnostic excisions.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11264674PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12905-024-03195-9DOI Listing

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