Emotional response to testing positive for human papillomavirus at cervical cancer screening: a mixed method systematic review with meta-analysis.
Emily McBrideOvidiu TatarZeev RosbergerLauren RockliffeLaura A V MarlowRona Moss-MorrisNavdeep KaurKristina WadeJo WallerPublished in: Health psychology review (2020)
Tens-of-millions of women every year test positive for human papillomavirus (HPV) at routine cervical screening. We performed a mixed-methods systematic review using a results-based convergent design to provide the first comprehensive overview of emotional response to testing positive for HPV (HPV+). We mapped our findings using the cognitive behavioural framework. Six electronic databases were searched from inception to 09-Nov-2019 and 33 papers were included. Random-effects meta-analyses revealed that HPV+ women with abnormal or normal cytology displayed higher short-term anxiety than those with normal results (MD on State-Trait Anxiety Inventory = 7.6, 95% CI: 4.59-10.60 and MD = 6.33, CI: 1.31-11.35, respectively); there were no long-term differences. Psychological distress (general/sexual/test-specific) was higher in HPV+ women with abnormal cytology in the short-term and long-term (SMD = 0.68, CI: 0.32-1.03 and SMD = 0.42, CI: 0.05-0.80, respectively). Testing HPV+ was also related to disgust/shame, surprise and fear about cancer. Broadly, adverse response related to eight cognitive constructs (low control, confusion, cancer-related concerns, relationship concerns, sexual concerns, uncertainty, stigma, low trust) and six behavioural constructs (relationship problems, social impact, non-disclosure of results, idiosyncratic prevention, indirect clinical interaction, changes to sexual practice). Almost exclusive use of observational and qualitative designs limited inferences of causality and conclusions regarding clinical significance.
Keyphrases
- cervical cancer screening
- high grade
- systematic review
- meta analyses
- mental health
- healthcare
- primary care
- sleep quality
- molecular dynamics
- randomized controlled trial
- dna methylation
- skeletal muscle
- polycystic ovary syndrome
- clinical trial
- papillary thyroid
- machine learning
- pregnant women
- human immunodeficiency virus
- genome wide
- hiv aids
- insulin resistance
- clinical practice
- cross sectional
- single cell
- fine needle aspiration
- adverse drug
- big data
- gene expression
- emergency department
- health information
- squamous cell