A rapid, high-volume cervical screening project using self-sampling and isothermal PCR HPV testing.
Andrew GoldsteinYang LeiLena GoldsteinAmelia GoldsteinQiao Xu BaiJuan FelixRoberta LipsonMaria DemarcoMark SchiffmanDidem EgemenKanan T DesaiSarah BedellJanet GerstenGail GoldsteinKaren O'KeefeCasey O'KeefeTierney O'KeefeCathy SebagLior LobelAnna ZhaoYan Ling LuPublished in: Infectious agents and cancer (2020)
Global control of cervical cancer will require both vaccination and screening of a huge number of women. This study illustrates a cervical screening strategy that can be used to screen-and-treat large numbers of women. HPV self-sampling facilitates high-volume screening. Specimens can be tested rapidly, promoting minimal loss-to-follow-up. Specifically, the AmpFire™ system used in this study is highly portable, simple, rapid (92 specimens per 65 min per unit), and economical. Visual triage can be performed on HPV+ women with a portable digital colposcope that provides magnification, lighting, and a recorded image. Diagnosis and appropriate treatment remain the most subjective elements. The digital image is under study for deep-learning based automated evaluation that could assist the management decision, either by itself or combined with HPV typing.