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. 2024 May;33(5):594-603.
doi: 10.1089/jwh.2023.0462. Epub 2024 Apr 12.

U.S. Women with Invasive Cervical Cancer: Characteristics and Potential Barriers to Prevention

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U.S. Women with Invasive Cervical Cancer: Characteristics and Potential Barriers to Prevention

Hannah G Rosenblum et al. J Womens Health (Larchmt). 2024 May.

Abstract

Objectives: Although invasive cervical cancer (ICC) rates have declined since the advent of screening, the annual age-adjusted ICC rate in the United States remains 7.5 per 100,000 women. Failure of recommended screening and management often precedes ICC diagnoses. The study aimed to evaluate characteristics of women with incident ICC, including potential barriers to accessing preventive care. Materials and Methods: We abstracted medical records for patients with ICC identified during 2008-2020 in five U.S. population-based surveillance sites covering 1.5 million women. We identified evidence of adverse social and medical conditions, including uninsured/underinsured, language barrier, substance use disorder, incarceration, serious mental illness, severe obesity, or pregnancy at diagnosis. We calculated descriptive frequencies and compared potential barriers by race/ethnicity, and among women with and without symptoms at diagnosis using chi-square tests. Results: Among 1,606 women with ICC (median age: 49 years; non-White: 47.4%; stage I: 54.7%), the majority (68.8%) presented with symptoms. Forty-six percent of women had at least one identified potential barrier; 15% had multiple barriers. The most common potential barriers among all women were being underinsured/uninsured (17.3%), and language (17.1%). Presence of any potential barrier was more frequent among non-White women and women with than without symptoms (p < 0.05). Conclusions: In this population-based descriptive study of women with ICC, we identified adverse circumstances that might have prevented women from seeking screening and treatment to prevent cancer. Interventions to increase appropriate cervical cancer screening and management are critical for reducing cervical cancer rates.

Keywords: cervical cancer screening; medical record abstraction; preventive medicine; underinsured.

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Figures

FIG. 1.
FIG. 1.
Prevalence of selected barriersa among women with and without symptoms at invasive cervical cancer diagnosis, HPV-IMPACT, 2008–2020.aBarriers with N < 100 not shown. See Methods section text and Supplementary Table S1 for definitions of barriers.bSignificant difference between those with and without symptoms (p < 0.05).HPV-IMPACT, Human Papillomavirus Vaccine Impact Monitoring Project.

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