Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/10609/146598
Title: Cervical screening: ESGO-EFC position paper of the European Society of Gynaecologic Oncology (ESGO) and the European Federation of Colposcopy (EFC)
Author: Kyrgiou, Maria  
Arbyn, Marc  
Bergeron, Christine  
BOSCH JOSÉ, FRANCESC XAVIER  
Dillner, Joakim  
Jit, Mark  
Kim, Jane  
Poljak, Mario  
Nieminen, Pekka  
Sasieni, Peter  
Kesic, Vesna  
Cuzick, Jack
Gultekin, Murat  
Others: Universitat Oberta de Catalunya (UOC)
Imperial College London
University of Hong Kong
University of Ljubljana
University of Helsinki
University of Belgrade
Queen’s Mary University
Citation: Kyrgiou, M., Arbyn, M., Bergeron, C., Bosch Jose, F.X., Dillner, J., Jit, M., Kim, J., Poljak, M., Nieminen, P., Sasieni, P., Kesic, V., Cuzick, J. & Gultekin, M. (2020). Cervical screening: ESGO-EFC position paper of the European Society of Gynaecologic Oncology (ESGO) and the European Federation of Colposcopy (EFC). British Journal of Cancer, 123(4), 510-517. doi: 10.1038/s41416-020-0920-9
Abstract: This paper summarises the position of ESGO and EFC on cervical screening based on existing guidelines and opinions of a team of lead experts. HPV test is replacing cytology as this offers greater protection against cervical cancer and allows longer screening intervals. Only a dozen of HPV tests are considered as clinically validated for screening. The lower specificity of HPV test dictates the use of triage tests that can select women for colposcopy. Reflex cytology is currently the only well validated triage test; HPV genotyping and p16 immunostaining may be used in the future, although methylation assays and viral load also look promising. A summary of quality assurance benchmarks is provided, and the importance to audit the screening histories of women who developed cancer is noted as a key objective. HPV-based screening is more cost-effective than cytology or cotesting. HPV-based screening should continue in the post-vaccination era. Only a fraction of the female population is vaccinated, and this varies across countries. A major challenge will be to personalise screening frequency according to vaccination status. Still the most important factor for successful prevention by screening is high population coverage and organised screening. Screening with self-sampling to reach under-screened women is promising.
Keywords: onncology
cervical screening
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41416-020-0920-9
Document type: info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Version: info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion
Issue Date: 8-Jun-2020
Publication license: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0  
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