Report: Push Back Age of Cervical Cancer Tests
Friday , November 20, 2009

CHICAGO —
Women
in the United States should start cervical cancer screening at age 21
and most do not need an annual Pap smear, according to new guidelines
issued Friday that aim to reduce the risk of unnecessary treatment.
The guidelines from the American College of Obstetricians and
Gynecologists or ACOG now say women younger than 30 should undergo
cervical cancer screening once every two years instead of an annual
exam. And those age 30 and older can be screened once every three years.
The recommendations are based on scientific evidence that suggests
more frequent testing leads to overtreatment, which can harm a young
woman's chances of carrying a child full term.
"Overtreatment of minor abnormal pap tests in young women and
adolescents can lead to consequences such as preterm labor in some
cases. It increases the risk," said Dr. Thomas Herzog of Columbia
University in New York, who is chairman of an ACOG subcommittee on
gynecologic cancers.
"Preterm delivery has become a huge problem in the United States
that has potential serious consequences for the unborn fetus," said Dr.
Jennifer Milosavijevic, a specialist in obstetrics and gynecology at
Henry Ford Health System in Detroit, who supports the guideline changes.
Avoiding Unnecessary Procedures
"These new guidelines will allow us to avoid doing unnecessary
procedures on the sexually active adolescent female," she said in an
e-mail.
The guidelines are unlikely to be met with the kind of rebellion
that accompanied new *** cancer screening guidelines this week,
which were largely based on computer projections, Dr. Len Lichtenfeld,
deputy chief medical officer of the American Cancer Society, said in a
telephone interview.
"There is a lot more agreement about the science of cervical cancer screening," Lichtenfeld said.
Prior recommendations called for annual cervical cancer screening to
start three years after a women first becomes sexually active, or by
age 21. Although the rate of HPV infection is high in this population,
rates of cervical cancer are very low.
Herzog said the new recommendations are based on studies that
suggest starting screening earlier than age 21 causes more harm than
benefit.
"We were overdiagnosing and overtreating adolescents and very young women," Herzog said in a telephone interview.
Cervical cancer is a slow-growing cancer caused by exposure to
certain strains of the human papillomavirus (HPV), a common sexually
transmitted disease among women and men.
"Women do not get cervical cancer first. They acquire HPV, the
sexually transmitted virus that causes precancerous abnormalities of
the cervix and cervical cancer. It takes years to progress from an
HPV-infection to full-blown cervical cancer," Milosavijevic said.
For that reason, she said changing the screening interval will not
mean more cervical cancers will be missed. She said most deaths from
cervical cancer in the United States happen in people who are screened
infrequently, or not at all.
"The take-home message for women is that you should still get your pap smear screening," Milosavijevic said.
HPV is the most common sexually transmitted disease in the world.
About 20 million Americans currently are infected with HPV, according
to the CDC.
In the past 30 years, cervical cancer rates in the United States
have fallen by more than half, due in large part to widespread use of
cervical cancer screening.