AI Article Synopsis

  • - The study reviews prior research to guide the implementation of HPV testing for cervical screening in India, focusing on methods of invitation, education, and follow-up within community-based programs and among women living with HIV.
  • - Out of 71 articles analyzed, most studies targeted the general population rather than specific groups, with a notable acceptance of self-collection methods among women; however, there was limited research on certain populations, like tribal groups.
  • - The authors conclude that while community-based HPV testing is feasible in India, further research is necessary to understand its integration into health systems and the effectiveness of different screening and treatment models, especially in underrepresented populations.

Article Abstract

Background: As Indian states consider HPV testing for cervical screening, there is a need to review evidence from prior studies to inform program design and evaluate implementation research gaps.

Design: We conducted a systematic review of original articles in Medline, Embase, Global Health and Web of Science, published from 2000 to May 4, 2024. Articles describing use of HPV as a primary cervical screening test in India, in either community-based programs for the general population, or among women living with HIV, were included. We describe approaches to invitation, education, screening, and follow-up, and map determinants and outcomes to the RE-AIM and the Consolidated Framework for Implementation Research frameworks.

Results: Of 71 included articles (51 unique studies), 19 reported on screening among women living with HIV, while 52 were community-based (general population of women). Self-collection was offered by 15 studies and was acceptable to most screened women. Community-based programs were mainly facility or outreach-based, with three studies offering only home-based self-collection, including one that integrated with cardiovascular risk screening. Studies from northeastern and tribal populations were scarce. Only one self-collection study used a screen and treat (at second visit) approach, but did not report follow-up, while none offered immediate treatment following a point-of-care test.

Conclusions: Community-based HPV testing, including self-collection, is feasible in India, with more research needed among underrepresented populations. Further implementation research is needed on integrating HPV screening with existing health systems, feasibility of HPV test and treat models and genotyping triage, to improve follow-up in low resource settings.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jcpo.2024.100513DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

cervical screening
12
screening studies
8
systematic review
8
hpv testing
8
community-based programs
8
general population
8
population women
8
women living
8
living hiv
8
screening
7

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!