Korrelation von externer Zytologie und interner Zytologie in der Erkennung von präinvasiven Läsionen der Zervix

Language
de
Document Type
Doctoral Thesis
Issue Date
2020-05-18
Issue Year
2019
Authors
Schulmeyer, Carla
Editor
Abstract

Purpose The current cervical cancer screening program in Germany recommends that results showing suspected HPV infection should be further examined in specialized colposcopy units. This study aimed to correlate externally documented Pap smear results with in-house colposcopy-guided Pap cytology results and compare colposcopy-guided biopsy and postoperative histopathology results. Methods Clinical data were analyzed from 3627 examinations in 2844 patients who visited a University certified dysplasia unit from 2014 to 2017; 2212 patients underwent complete assessments, including Pap smear, colposcopy, HPV testing, colposcopy-guided Purpose The current cervical cancer screening program in Germany recommends that results showing suspected HPV infection should be further examined in specialized colposcopy units. This study aimed to correlate externally documented Pap smear results with in-house colposcopy-guided Pap cytology results and compare colposcopy-guided biopsy and postoperative histopathology results. Methods Clinical data were analyzed from 3627 examinations in 2844 patients who visited a University certified dysplasia unit from 2014 to 2017; 2212 patients underwent complete assessments, including Pap smear, colposcopy, HPV testing, colposcopy-guided biopsy, and/or surgery. The results were analyzed descriptively. Results External and in-house Pap results were consistent in 1054 of the 2212 patients (47.65%). Referral cytology showed a higher grade than in-house in 456 (20.61%) and a lower grade in 702 (31.74%). Using the histopathological findings as the gold standard, overdiagnosis in the referral cytology was noted in 180 patients (13.19%), underdiagnosis in 263 (19.27%), and concordant findings in 922 (67.55%). For in-house cytology, overdiagnosis was found in 133 patients (10.74%), underdiagnosis in 192 (15.51%), and accurate diagnosis with congruent cytology and histopathology findings in 913 (73.75%). Positive high-risk HPV test results were found in 953 patients (43.08%), while 1195 (54.02%) had a negative high-risk HPV status. High-risk HPV testing was not performed in 64 patients (2.89%). Conclusions The rate of detection of cervical abnormalities differs significantly depending on whether the examination is performed routinely or in specialized units. Colposcopy-guided Pap smears correlate significantly better with histology than referral cytology results without colposcopic guidance. More severe lesions were also detected more accurately.

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