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Comparative Study
. 2006 Nov;103(2):463-6.
doi: 10.1016/j.ygyno.2006.03.021. Epub 2006 Apr 19.

Evaluation of HPV 16 PCR detection in self- compared with clinician-collected samples in women referred for colposcopy

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Comparative Study

Evaluation of HPV 16 PCR detection in self- compared with clinician-collected samples in women referred for colposcopy

A Daponte et al. Gynecol Oncol. 2006 Nov.

Abstract

Objectives: A clinical prospective evaluation study was conducted to evaluate PCR detection of high-risk human papillomavirus (HPV) type 16 in self-sampled vaginal compared with clinician-collected cervical specimens.

Methods: Paired vaginal and cervical specimens were collected from 137 consecutive women referred for colposcopy because of abnormal cervical cytology. In-house and a commercial PCR method for HPV type 16 were used. Self-sampled vaginal HPV 16 detection was compared to histology and physician-collected cervical specimens.

Results: Of the 137 patients, 98 had proven abnormal histology and were included in the analysis. Overall, using the cervix HPV detection as reference method, the self-sampled vaginal sample showed sensitivity 91.8%, specificity 96.1% and agreement kappa (kappa) 0.881. Using the histology as reference, all 11 cervical cancer cases were HPV-16-positive in both cervical and vaginal samples, and in 43 high-grade lesions, detection sensitivity in cervix was 72.1% (kappa 0.588) and vagina 67.4% (kappa 0.516). HPV 16 detection did not differ (P=0.27) between clinician-collected cervical and self-sampled vaginal specimens.

Conclusions: The self-collected vaginal sample is highly concordant with the physician-collected cervical sample in HPV 16 detection.

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