Cervical cancer is the most common cause of cancer and a leading cause of death among HIV-infected women living in resource-limited settings. Although screening for premalignant lesions is an effective way of reducing cervical cancer incidence, its uptake in low-resource settings to date is low. The use of HPV testing for primary screening is currently recommended by many guidelines - including the WHO guidelines for cervical cancer screening in resource-limited settings - because of its greater sensitivity and ease of use compared to other options. However, these WHO guidelines have both highlighted the need to conduct more research on appropriate HPV-based algorithms among HIV-infected women, as immunodeficiency may affect the screening performance. Indeed, HPV infections in HIV-infected women are very common, so there is a need for additional triage to identify women most at risk and there remains considerable uncertainty on the optimal option for such triage. Most of the evidence available comes from HIV-negative populations living in high-resource settings and is not necessarily relevant for low-resource contexts where the epidemiological background is different, women access late to screening and may not have follow up visits, where financial constraints are important and health service resources limited. Hence, the proposed project aims to provide evidence on the effectiveness and feasibility of HPV-based screening algorithms among HIV-infected women in low-resource settings. This multicenter cross-sectional study will include 3,000 HIV-infected women (30-49 years old) receiving HAART and followed in Abidjan (Ivory Coast), Bobo-Dioulasso (Burkina Faso) and Phnom Penh (Cambodia). After self-collection of cervico-vaginal samples, each participant will have an HPV test with partial genotyping primary using the Xpert HPV assay, a real-time PCR assay that provides the possibility of identifying 14 HR-HPV types within one hour. The Xpert HPV test has been chosen because of the wide availability of the Genexpert platform in HIV care centers from resource-limited settings. Furthermore, it can specifically detect HPV-16, 18 and 45, the most carcinogenic HPV types in both HIV-negative and HIV-positive women, separately from other high-risk HPV types. VIA will be another triage option either alone or combined to HPV DNA genotyping. In addition, participants treated for cervical lesion will be followed over 12 months to assess the risk of post-treatment lesions (CIN2+/HSIL) and to identify associated risk-factors.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NA
Purpose
SCREENING
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
3,000
HPV testing with the GenXpert platform VIA Biopsies of VIA+ lesions or random Treatment with thermal ablation of women with precancerous lesions
HIV day care center
Bobo-Dioulasso, Burkina Faso
RECRUITINGCalmette Hospital
Phnom Penh, Cambodia
RECRUITINGCEPREF
Abidjan, Côte d’Ivoire
ENROLLING_BY_INVITATIONSensitivity of the triage options
Sensitivity of the triage options to detect CIN2+ and CIN3+ lesions with histology as the reference standard
Time frame: Day 0
Specificity of the triage options
Specificity of the triage options to detect CIN2+ and CIN3+ lesions with histology as the reference standard
Time frame: Day 0
Positive and negative predictive value (PPV and NPV) of the triage options
PPV and NPV of the triage options to detect CIN2+ and CIN3+ lesions with histology as the reference standard
Time frame: Day 0
Positive and negative diagnostic likelihood ratio (DLR) of the triage options
Positive and negative DLR of the triage options to detect CIN2+ and CIN3+ lesions with histology as the reference standard
Time frame: Day 0
Acceptability and feasibility
Acceptability and feasibility of the self-sampling, of the different triage options and of the treatment cervical lesions
Time frame: Day 0 and Week 1
Prevalence of CIN2+ lesions
Prevalence of CIN2 lesions, overall and by sub-groups defined by age categories, current CD4-cell count, nadir CD4-cell count and treatment history
Time frame: Day 0
Prevalence of CIN3+ lesions
Prevalence of CIN3 lesions overall and by sub-groups defined by age categories, current CD4-cell count, nadir CD4-cell count and treatment history
Time frame: Day 0
Prevalence of cervical cancer
Prevalence of cervical cancer overall and by sub-groups defined by age categories, current CD4-cell count, nadir CD4-cell count and treatment history
Time frame: Day 0
Adverse events
Rate and nature of adverse events and protocol violations
Time frame: Day 0 and Week 1 up to 24 weeks
Proportion of the women eligible to HPV screening who were actually screened and treated (if required)
Proportion of the women eligible for the study who were actually screened, treated (if required)
Time frame: Day 0
Evaluation of the micro-costing
Evaluation of the micro-costing of the various components of the screening strategies
Time frame: Day 0 up to Week 26
Evaluation of post-treatment HPV clearance
Evaluation of the HPV clearance at M6 and M12 after thermal-ablation
Time frame: Week 24 and 48 post treatment
Evaluation of post-treatment cervical lesion
Evaluation of the proportion of CIN2 and CIN3 at M12 after treatment
Time frame: Week 48 post treatment
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