The use of molecular markers for cervical screening of women living with HIV in South Africa

Wieke W. Kremer, Marjolein van Zummeren, Erika Breytenbach, Karin L. Richter, Renske D. M. Steenbergen, Chris J. L. M. Meijer, Greta Dreyer

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

17 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Objective:To determine the performance of molecular screening strategies for detection of cervical intraepithelial neoplasia grade 3 or worse (CIN3+) in comparison with cytology screening in women living with HIV.Design:Post-hoc analysis using data from a South African study cohort.Methods:Cytology and human papillomavirus (HPV)-based strategies were evaluated, including single test and FAM19A4/miR124-2 methylation triage strategies. Participants underwent cytology screening and a colposcopy-directed biopsy. Valid results on cytology, HPV status, 16/18 genotyping and histology were available for 318 women. Detection of HPV and FAM19A4/miR124-2 hypermethylation was performed on DNA from cervical scrapes. Histological diagnosis of CIN3+ was used as outcome.Results:Cytology provided highest specificity (91.6%), but lowest sensitivity (59.3%), whereas a single HPV test provided highest sensitivity (83.1%), but lowest specificity (66.4%). Combining cytology with methylation did not improve the performance compared with cytology alone: a slight increase in sensitivity was seen, at the cost of a decrease in specificity. Triage of high-risk HPV positive women with methylation increased specificity (76.1%) compared with a single HPV or cytology test, while maintaining acceptable sensitivity (72.9%). Similar performance was observed for HPV16/18 with methylation triage (sensitivity 79.7%, specificity 74.8%). The number of women needed to refer to detect one CIN3+ ranged from 1.5 (cytology) to 2.6 (single HPV test).Conclusion:Molecular screening strategies using HPV, with or without HPV16/18 genotyping, and FAM19A4/miR124-2 methylation have higher sensitivity with an acceptable loss in specificity compared with current cytology screening and are efficient for the detection of CIN3+ in South African women living with HIV.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)2035-2042
Number of pages8
JournalAIDS
Volume33
Issue number13
Early online date2 Aug 2019
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Nov 2019

Keywords

  • Africa
  • DNA methylation
  • HIV
  • cervical intraepithelial neoplasia
  • early detection of cancer
  • human papillomavirus

Cite this