O&G JC103: Abnormal Cervical Smear: Cervical Cancer, Cancer Screening Flashcards

1
Q

Why cervical cancer is a disease suitable for screening?

A

Screening:
- Detect disease among healthy population (i.e. people without symptoms of disease)
- work best in cancer with high prevalence e.g. cervical cancer

Epidemiology of cervical cancer in HK:
- 7th incidence
- 8th mortality
- median age 54

***Wilson and Jugner criteria for disease screening:
1. Suitable disease
- early treatment is effective
- long progression from pre-cancer stage to invasive stage

  1. Suitable test
    - minimally invasive simple collection (i.e. cervical cytology)
    - cervix accessible to early cytology collection for screening, HPV testing
  2. Suitable screening programme (Practical + Implementable)
    - HK DoH launched a territory-wide cervical screening programme in 2004
  3. Cost
    - cost-effective screening test (cervical cytology affordable)

Cervical cytology:
- Effective in reduction in cervical cancer mortality since introduction of Pap smear screening
- Proven value for mass screening
- Screening index ↑ —> Incidence ↓

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2
Q

How to take a cervical smear

A
  1. Speculum of correct size
    - depending on size of vagina: larger for multiparous, smaller for nulliparous, menopausal women
  2. Adequate exposure of cervix
  3. Light source
  4. Sampling device: **Ayre’s spatula / brush / broom
    - menopausal women: Os is small + Squamo-Columnar junction receded into cervical canal —> use **
    Endocervical brush
  5. Transformation zone (Squamo-Columnar junction: usually start of cervical neoplasia)
    - rotate clockwise 5 times —> transfer brush to vial (Liquid-based cytology) —> rinse brush / spatula + swirl broom vigorously —> cells into liquid —> send for histology
    - ***Liquid-based cytology (LBC):
    —> clearer background for morphological assessment of cells
    —> ↓ unsatisfactory smear
    —> ↑ LSIL +/- HSIL detection rate
    —> ↓ ASCUS:SIL ratio (i.e. more definitive diagnosis can be achieved)
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3
Q

Proper preparation of smear / LBC

A
  1. Properly labelled slide + bottle
  2. Checked with patient for correct identity
  3. Correct preparation of smear / LBC
    - ***immediately fix it on glass slide (otherwise have artifact)
  4. Properly fill in request form with matched identity

Information on request form:
1. ***Clinical data
- helps cytopathologists to make correct diagnosis
2. Age
3. LMP, duration of menopause
4. Parity
5. Contraceptive history
6. Drug / Medical history

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4
Q

When NOT to take a cervical smear

A
  1. ***Blood in vagina / cervix (usually ∵ menstruation)
    - ∵ blood may obscure normal cells
  2. ***Obvious / gross growth on cortex —> Biopsy more appropriate
    - ∵ cancer: necrotic cells covering cancer —> cytology only pick up necrotic cells rather than cancer cells —> miss Dx of cancer
  3. Cervix cannot be seen
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5
Q

Causes of Unsatisfactory smear

A
  1. Artifacts
    - inappropriate fixation of glass slide
    - air dried / too thick / too scanty cells on smear / heavily blood stained
  2. Inflammation / Infection
    - inflammatory cells mask normal cells
    —> treat infection + repeat
  3. Menopausal
    - ∵ **atrophic epithelium —> cells will look abnormal
    —> apply **
    local estrogen + repeat
  4. Post-treatment
    - RT / Chemotherapy
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6
Q

What is an abnormal smear?

A
  • Different grades of abnormal smear
  • Abnormal smear =/= cancer
  • Different classifications of abnormalities exist
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7
Q

***WHO histology classification of Tumours of Uterine cervix

A
  1. Epithelial tumours
    - **Squamous cell tumours + precursors
    - **
    Glandular tumours + precursors
    - Other epithelial tumours
  2. Mesenchymal tumours
  3. Mixed epithelial + mesenchymal tumours
  4. Melanocytic tumours
  5. Lymphoid + Haematopoietic tumours
  6. Secondary tumours
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8
Q

***Classification of Cervix, Vagina, Vulva neoplasms

A

Bethesda system (based on Cytology), WHO classification (based on Biopsy):
Binary system of diagnosis:
1. Low grade SIL
2. High grade SIL

Progression of HPV infection from Mild dysplasia —> In-situ —> Microinvasive carcinoma:
- Old classification: Condyloma —> CIN1 (mild dysplasia) —> CIN2 (moderate dysplasia) —> CIN3 (severe dysplasia - in-situ carcinoma)

  • New classification:
    —> Condyloma, CIN1 —> now known as **LSIL
    —> CIN2, CIN3 —> now known as **
    HSIL

5th edition WHO classification of female genital tumours:
***HPV status need to be specified in Epithelial tumours of uterine cervix
—> to facilitate more accurate evaluation of impact of HPV testing + vaccination in cervical cancer prevention
—> HPV-associated / HPV-independent

HPV status ascertained by:
1. **HPV molecular testing
or
2. **
p16 immunohistochemistry

Example:
Tumours of Uterine cervix: Squamous cell tumours + precursors
1. Squamous Intraepithelial lesions (SIL)
2. SCC, HPV-associated
3. SCC, HPV-independent
4. SCC, NOS (not otherwise specified) (if condition not allowed)

Tumours of Uterine cervix: Glandular tumours + precursors
1. Adenocarcinoma in-situ, HPV-associated
2. Adenocarcinoma in-situ, HPV-independent
3. Adenocarcinoma, HPV-associated
4. Adenocarcinoma, HPV-independent, Gastric type
5. Adenocarcinoma, HPV-independent, Clear cell type
6. Adenocarcinoma, HPV-independent, Mesonephric type
7. Adenocarcinoma, others

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9
Q

The Bethesda system (TBS)

A

Most widely adopted cervical cytology reporting system

Standardised terminology + reporting of cervical cytology
- Processing methods (i.e. Specimen types)
- Ancillary techniques
- Automation

Evolution in concept in cervical carcinogenesis:
- Identification of **HPV as a **carcinogen of cervical cancer
- Merging of **Dysplasia + **Carcinoma-in-situ into ***SIL (Squamous intraepithelial lesion)
—> based on behaviour, molecular virologic findings, morphologic features

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10
Q

***Classification of Squamous cell abnormalities

A
  1. Atypical squamous cells
    - of undetermined significance (ASC-US)
    - cannot exclude HSIL (ASC-H)
  2. Squamous intraepithelial lesion (SIL)
    - Low-grade SIL
    - High-grade SIL
    - with features suspicious for invasion (if invasion suspected)
  3. Squamous cell carcinoma (SCC)
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11
Q

Atypical squamous cells of undetermined significance (ASC-US)

A
  • Most common cytological abnormality detected in screening population (60-80%)
  • 3-4% of overall screening cytology
  • majority turn out to be normal / LSIL
  • 5-17% HSIL
  • 0.1-0.2% Invasive (i.e. Carcinoma (self notes))
  • ***Higher risk of subsequent confirmation of LSIL / HSIL compared with general women population
  • ***ASCUS:SIL ratio used as bench marking for performance of cytology laboratory

Management of ASC-US smear (with / without HPV triage / co-testing)
1. **Repeat cytology (at 6 + 12 months)
or
2. Together with **
high-risk HPV test (as triage / part of co-testing)
—> Either one positive / persisting abnormality —> ***Colposcopy
—> Both normal / negative —> Repeat cytology / with co-testing at 3 years

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12
Q

Atypical squamous cells cannot exclude HSIL (ASC-H)

A
  • More worrying
  • Display abnormalities that fall short of diagnosis of HSIL
  • ***24-94% HSIL

ASCUS/LSIL triage study:
- ASC-H associated with ***higher detection rate of oncogenic HPV + subsequent identification of underlying CIN2 / above (HSIL) (compared to ASC-US)

Management:
1. **Colposcopy + **Biopsy
—> Endocervical sampling if unsatisfactory colposcopy (i.e. cannot see Squamo-columnar junction)

  1. If no lesion identified —> review cytology by pathologists —> if no change in diagnosis
    —> repeat cytology ***6 monthly
    —> repeat colposcopy if persistent abnormal cytology
    —> refer back to routine screening (every 3 years) if cytology normal twice
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13
Q

LSIL (Low grade squamous intraepithelial lesion)

A
  • 1.5-2.5% of smears screened
  • 15-30% HSIL (CIN2-3)
  • 0.1% Invasive (i.e. Carcinoma (self notes))

Management:
1. **Colposcopy + **Biopsy
2. ***Co-testing
- hrHPV positive —> Colposcopy
- hrHPV negative —> Repeat co-testing in 12 months
—> If either abnormal —> Colposcopy
—> If both normal —> Repeat co-testing / cytology in 3 years —> Routine screening

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14
Q

HSIL (High grade squamous intraepithelial lesion)

A
  • 70-75% confirmed HSIL (CIN2-3)
  • 1-2% Invasive (i.e. Carcinoma (self notes))

Management:
1. **Colposcopy (within 6 weeks)
2. **
Punch biopsy (if gross lesion seen)

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15
Q

***Classification of Glandular cell abnormalities

A
  1. Atypical (classified based on origin of glandular + degree of severity)
    - Endocervical cells (NOS / specify in comments)
    - Endometrial cells (NOS / specify in comments)
    - **Glandular cells (NOS / specify in comments)
    - Endocervical cells (favour neoplastic)
    - **
    Glandular cells (favour neoplastic)
  2. Endocervical adenocarcinoma in-situ
  3. Adenocarcinoma
    - Endocervical
    - Endometrial
    - Extrauterine
    - NOS
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16
Q

Atypical glandular cells

A

AGC-NOS:
- 9-41% HSIL, AIS, CA

AGC-FN:
- 27-96% HSIL, AIS, CA

Management
1. **Colposcopy + **Biopsy
2. **Endometrial biopsy (Endometrial sampling first for AGC NOS, endometrial cells)
3. **
Endocervical sampling
4. Pelvic USG (to exclude adnexal / extrauterine lesions)

AGC-FN:
- if no significant pathology explaining source of abnormal cells —> diagnostic cold knife cone (Cone biopsy) is recommended (ablative procedure unacceptable)

17
Q

Adenocarcinoma in-situ (AIS)

A
  • 48-69% confirmed AIS
  • 38% Adenocarcinoma

Management:
1. Colposcopy + Biopsy
2. Endocervical sampling
3. Endometrial sampling
4. Cone biopsy (if no lesion)

18
Q

Recent advances in Cytopathology

A
  1. Gynaecological cytopathology reporting system
    - TBS
  2. Modern laboratory techniques (Ancillary techniques)
    - Automation in cytology preparation
    - Liquid-based cytology
    - Computer-assisted automated screening —> Computer help to find abnormal cells within a smear —> Reduce human error
    - Application of molecular tests + IHC (esp. ***HPV tests)
  3. Modern cytology laboratory management
    - Quality control + Accreditation
19
Q

Clinical application of HPV test

A
  1. ***Primary screening
  2. ***Triage of ASC-US
  3. Test of cure —> Determine risk for persistent / recurrent disease

Ultimate purpose: ***Detection of HSIL + Carcinoma

20
Q

Considerations of Effective screening

A
  1. When to start?
    - balance between minor abnormality if started early vs chance of missing cancer if started later
    - HKCOG/HKSAR recommendations:
    —> start at **25 yo / **commencement of sexual life (whichever is **later) (∵ minor abnormality is common before 25 + cervical cancer is rare)
    —> stop at **
    65 yo
    —> women >65 who ***never had cervical smear should be screened
    —> taking smear during pregnancy may induce bleeding + anxiety to woman (not the best time to perform cervical screening)
  2. Target population?
  3. How frequent?
    - balance between cost of frequent interval vs chance of missing cancer if too infrequent
    - HKCOG/HKSAR recommendations:
    —> **3-yearly intervals (after **2 consecutive normal annual smears)
    —> annual screening advised for high risk people developing cervical cancer (e.g. **immunosuppressed, **HIV women)
  4. How to organise?
    - organised screening more effective than opportunistic screening (i.e. when women turns up at clinic for unrelated issues)
    - need a **central registry —> know who has been screened / should be screened + when to better organise the programme
    - can send **
    reminders if not turn up when due for screening / further management
    - to trace defaulters esp. those with ***abnormal results —> treat abnormal early lesions to prevent further progression + treat early cancer asap
  5. Follow-up of abnormally screened people
  6. How to reach people
    - public education
    - health workers education
    - mass media
    - school education
    —> conscious of need for screening + where can get screening
    —> health professionals other than doctor should promote to women of appropriate age
    —> DoH: Women’s health centre, Well women clinics, Family planning association
    —> Mobile units to reach out
21
Q

Current status of cervical screening in HK

A
  • Launched on March 8, 2004
  • Central registry (CSIS): need consent by women to join (unlike UK: eligible women will be enrolled without need of consent —> can get population data easily)
  • Publicity
  • Public education + training + education of medical personnel, smear takers
  • Cytology pathology laboratory accreditation according to QA criteria
  • Colposcopy accreditation according to QA criteria
  • Audit on screening performance (based on CSIS)

Current status:
- CSIS: only ~20% of female (25-64) enrolled —> need to encourage more women to enroll
- <50% eligible women are regularly screened
- only 61% eligible women are ever screened (far from satisfactory, ***>=80% should be achieved)
- those who need the procedures most are least likely to get it
—> even if ↓ margin of unscreened women
—> not ↓ population risk of disease by same amount

CSIS 2018:
- Unsatisfactory specimen rate remains low
- Satisfactory cervical cytology tests: 95% were negative for Intraepithelial lesion / malignancy (5.7% abnormalities detected)
- AS-CUS, LSIL most common (5.2% of all satisfactory results)
- HSIL: 0.1%

22
Q

How to manage abnormal screening results?

A

Depends on grade of abnormality (Atypical cells to Carcinoma)
- Find out whether have pre-invasive lesions + deal with appropriately
- Offer appropriate treatment if cancer

Options:
1. Mild: Repeat cytology / HPV test
2. Suspicious: Refer colposcopy + biopsy for histological diagnosis
3. Obvious lesions: Biopsy (e.g. punch biopsy)

SpC Revision:
1. Benign looking endometrial cells
- investigate if postmenopausal or >=45 and symptomatic
- treat as normal if <45
2. Unsatisfactory
- repeat cyctology in 2-4 months
3. Absent transformation zone
- manage as normal

23
Q

Colposcopy

A
  • Binocular optical instrument
  • Magnify cervix 8-25x through speculum
  • 3% Acetic acid: to pick up abnormal area (Aceto-white lesions, observe abnormal vascular pattern —> Mosaic / Punctations appearance)
  • ***Lugol’s iodine (Schiller’s test): Adjunctive test to pick up abnormal area (Normal area stained dark brown while abnormal area not pick up stain)

Role of colposcopist:
1. Identify worst area —> biopsy
- dense acetowhite, abnormal vascular patterns (mosaic / punctation area)
- Lugol’s iodine negative area
- can be >=1 area —> multiple bites of biopsy

  1. Satisfactory examination
    - need to identify whole abnormal lesion + whole squamo-columnar junction

Unsatisfactory examination:
1. Low grade lesions:
- cannot see SCJ —> review cytology by pathologist + **Endocervical sampling —> if persists —> **Cone biopsy
- **local estrogen cream for menopausal women —> repeat Colposcopy
- if whole lesion cannot be seen —> **
Cone biopsy to rule out abnormalities high up in endocervical canal

  1. High grade lesions:
    —> ***Cone biopsy
24
Q

***Treatment of Low grade CIN + High grade CIN

A

Low grade CIN:
- if already histologically proven to be low grade lesion
- Majority of Low-grade CIN **regressed spontaneously (usually over 2 years)
- Follow up every **
6 months by Cytology until normal —> Routine screening
- Consider treatment if persisted 2 years
- If patient not reliable for follow-up —> Treatment can be offered at diagnosis

High grade CIN:
1. Ablative therapy (no histology ∵ lesion destroyed)
- Cryotherapy (-50oC)
- Cold coagulation
- Diathermy
- Laser evaporation

  1. **Excision therapy (tissue intact —> can send for **histology)
    - Cone
    —> Knife (can cut deeper than loop, if want to take Endocervical sample e.g. glandular lesion (usually in Endocervical canal) (SpC Revision))
    —> Laser
    —> Loop excision (LLETZ: large loop excision of transformation zone of cervix)
  2. Hysterectomy (rarely indicated unless other indications e.g. Menorrhagia)

Monitoring after treatment:
1. Cervical smear
- repeated **6 monthly until normal for **3 consecutive smear —> then annually
- 10% chance of recurrence of CIN —> important to stress to patient to follow-up

25
Q

LLETZ: large loop excision of transformation zone of cervix (子宮頸電圈切除)

A
  • Done under ***LA
  • Electric loop excision of cervix
  • Base cauterised with ball electrode for Haemostasis
  • Specimen for histology

Complications:
1. **Bleeding (intra-op / post-op) (1-8%)
2. **
Infection
3. **Cervical stenosis (1%)
4. Cervical deformity
5. **
Cervical incompetence
6. **Premature rupture of membrane (PROM), **Premature labour, Low birthweight

26
Q

***Treatment of Early invasive cervical cancer

A
  1. Radical hysterectomy with Bilateral pelvic lymphadenectomy
  2. RT
  • 85% 5-year survival rate
27
Q

Primary prevention of cervical cancer

A
  1. Healthy lifestyle
  2. Safer sex
  3. Vaccine

Screening: ***Secondary prevention

28
Q

HPV vaccines

A
  • HPV found in almost all cervical cancer
  • Majority of HPV infection ***cleared by itself esp. in young women <30
  • ***Persistent HPV infection predisposed to cancer development
  • Prevention of HPV infection —> Theoretically can prevent cervical cancer
  • 14 types of HPV associated with cancer

3 types of HPV vaccines:
1. Bivalent vaccine (16, 18 —> cervical cancer)
2. Quadrivalent vaccine (16, 18 + 6, 11 —> condyloma / warts)
3. Nanovalent vaccine (6, 11, 16, 18, 31, 33, 45, 52, 58 —> additional 5 oncogenic HPV types account for >90% of cervical cancer)
—> ALL showed ~100% effectiveness in preventing HPV type specific infection + cervical lesions
—> considered safe

Normal 3 doses but:
- **
2 doses within 6-12 months have similar immunogenicity in young girls (
*<15) —> can be used instead of 3 doses for the 3 vaccines in young population (<15)
—> also ↑ compliance + ↓ cost

Effectiveness of vaccination also depends on:
1. Infrastructure to give vaccines
2. Acceptability by medical profession, public, government
3. Availability
4. Funding

Countries with mass vaccination + good coverage:
- ↓ in abnormal cervical cytology, HSIL
- ↓ colposcopy examination
- ↓ operative procedure required for HSIL treatment

Recommendations from HKCOG on HPV vaccines:
- Prophylactic HPV vaccines most effective with **no prior exposure to virus (i.e. never-sexually active)
- women >=15: 3 doses
- women <15: 2 doses
- **
NOT given to pregnant women
- Cervical cancer screening ***still necessary after HPV vaccination

29
Q

Summary

A
  • High prevalence of cervical cancer —> suitable for screening
  • Cervical cytology is simple, sensitive, specific, relatively cheap
  • Primary HPV testing already introduced in some countries
  • Screening target population: 25-64
  • Interval: **3 years after **2 consecutive normal ***annual smears / if HPV negative, repeat in 3-5 years
  • Treatment of CIN simple + effective
  • Treatment of Early invasive cancer has good prognosis

Primary prevention is best:
- Bivalent, Quadrivalent HPV vaccines: prevent >=70% cervical cancer
- Nanovalent HPV vaccines: prevent >90% cervical cancer
- 2020: HKSAR implementation of vaccination in girls
- Screening still recommended when reach target age (25)
- **HPV testing as primary screening: started in some countries, could be the preferred method after vaccination
- **
HPV testing should not be used before 30 for primary screening (SpC Revision)

WHO pledge to eliminate cervical cancer globally by 2030:
- WHO target 90:70:90
—> 90% coverage of HPV vaccination of girls <15
—> 70% coverage of screening (70% women screened with high-performance tests by 35, 45) + 90% treatment of precancerous lesions
—> Management of 90% of invasive cancer cases