Women between 16-30 at highest risk of cervical cancer

ANI  |  New Delhi [Delhi] 

A retrospective analysis of (Human Papillomavirus) testing in Cervical Screening has revealed that samples received from women from 16 - 30 years (14%) age group had the highest percentage of positive cases of high risk HPV, and hence a chance of developing cervical

Performed by SRL Diagnostics, it was followed by the percentage in women from the 61-85 years (8.39%) age group. More than 3,000 women were tested pan-between 2013 and 2017 for High Risk by using the global standard method - Hybrid Capture II.

Overall, 8.04% women showed More women from (about 10.23%) had high risk than those from any other zone, closely followed by women from the South (about 9.78%) zone.

The tests utilized in the screening for cervical are - Conventional (Pap) test and Liquid-based (LBC), Visual Inspection with Acetic Acid (VIA) and testing for high-risk types. In this analysis by SRL test data of by Hybrid Capture 2 were used.

accounts for nearly one-third of all global cervical deaths, with approximately 1, 32,000 new cases being diagnosed and 74,000 deaths occurring annually.

After breast cancer, cervical is the second leading cause of deaths, accounting for 17% of all mortalities among women between 30 and 69 years, where the median age is 38 years. ranks highest in the age-standardized incidence of cervical in at 22 per 100,000 population.

Almost 100% of are caused by long-term (over a decade), infections. Among 100 different types, 8 most common high-risk types: 16, 18, 45, 33, 31, 52, 58, and 35 account for 91% of all cases of cervical 16, 18, and 45 are known to occur in 75% of the most common type of cervical (squamous cell) and in 94% of (the second most common form).

Considering its role in cervical cancer, testing has become an essential part of current clinical practice mainly for the management of cervical and precancerous lesions.

Studies in indicate about 5% of women in the general population are estimated to harbor cervical HPV-16/18 at a given time. Elaborating on this, Dr B. R Das, and Mentor - R&D and Molecular Pathology, said, "Though most of infections clear up on their own and most pre-cancerous lesions resolve spontaneously, persistence of such has 100 fold risk of high-grade cervical Therefore, main goal of cervical screening should be to detect and treat pre-before develops."

AP test is the most commonly used screening test, however is much more likely to miss than testing. Available data indicates testing is more sensitive for detecting and marginally less sensitive for

Owing to these limitations, co-testing in women between 30 and 65 years is the preferred screening strategy recommended by most of the global medical associations.

It is recommended to be performed every five years. Nevertheless experts believe that screening benefit of co-testing is largely driven by testing and not

In India, in spite of alarmingly high figures, there is no nationwide government-sponsored screening program. Due to affordability issues and lack of awareness, reflex testing is more popular particularly in suspected/high-risk cases.

Stressing the importance of right screening strategy, Dr. Das added, "Research indicates that approximately 80% of women diagnosed with cervical have never been screened or have not had regular Pap smears. The main choice moving forward is between reflex testing, co-testing or testing alone. There is no cure for If detected early, problems associated with the virus (such as warts) can be treated. screening aids in screening of cervical in the early stages and early detection is key for stopping cervical cancer".

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Fri, February 02 2018. 13:50 IST