HPV vaginal self-sampling among women non-adherent to Papanicolaou screening in Chile

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Abstract

Objective. To evaluate acceptance, preference and compliance with referral of vaginal self-sampling for the detection of Human papillomavirus (HPV) among women non-adherent to Papanicolaou (Pap) screening in Santiago, Chile. Materials and methods. Using multistage sampling we identified women aged 30-64 years who reported not receiving a Pap test in the previous three years and offered them Pap testing at the health center or vaginal self-sampling for HPV testing at home. Self-collected samples were analyzed with hybrid capture. All HPV+ women were referred for colposcopy, biopsy and treatment when needed. Results. 1 254 eligible women were contacted; 86.5% performed self-sampling and 8.1% refused; 124 women were HPV+ (11.4%: 95%CI 9.6-13.5) of whom 85.5% attended colposcopy; 12 had CIN2+ (1.1%: 95 %CI 0.5-1.7). Conclusion. HPV vaginal self-sampling can be easily implemented in Chile and could improve coverage, successfully reaching women who drop out of the screening program.

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Léniz, J., Barriga, M. I., Lagos, M., Ibáñez, C., Puschel, K., & Ferreccio, C. (2013). HPV vaginal self-sampling among women non-adherent to Papanicolaou screening in Chile. Salud Publica de Mexico, 55(2), 162–169. https://doi.org/10.1590/S0036-36342013000200007

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