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Brief Title: Effect of Human Papillomavirus Self-Collection on Cervical Cancer Screening in High Risk Women: My Body, My Test 3
Official Title: Effect of HPV Self-Collection on Cervical Cancer Screening in High Risk Women: My Body, My Test 3
Study ID: NCT02651883
Brief Summary: This study will investigate whether cervical cancer screening completion among under-screened women could be improved by offering HPV (human papillomavirus) testing by at-home self-collection followed by screening invitation compared to screening invitation alone.
Detailed Description: Invasive cervical cancer (ICC) is preventable through regular screening and treatment, but one fifth of US women report not receiving Pap testing at recommended intervals. More than half of ICC cases occur in these under-screened women. For women 30 years and older, the US Preventive Services Task Force recommends Pap smears alone every 3 years or physician-collected HPV testing with Pap smear (co-testing) every 5 years. The FDA approved primary HPV physician screening for US women 25 years and older. Self-collection for HPV testing is a valid and well-accepted method for detecting HPV infection with comparable sensitivity and specificity to physician-collection for detecting high-grade cervical lesions. This 2-arm randomized control trial of 510 women will investigate whether offering HPV testing by mailed at-home self-collection to under-screened women increases their likelihood of completing cervical cancer screening. All participants will received a screening invitation by phone: a phone call providing (i) education on cervical cancer, and (ii) assistance scheduling an appointment for free screening at a study-affiliated clinic, if needed. Those randomized to the intervention arm will first be mailed a kit to self-collect a cervico-vaginal sample, return the sample for oncogenic HPV testing, and receive their results by phone. HPV negative women will be considered screening complete. HPV positive women will be invited to schedule an appointment for free follow-up in-clinic screening in the same call in which their results are delivered. The study endpoint of screening completion will be defined as completing in-clinic screening (control arm participants and HPV positive intervention arm participants) or receiving a negative HPV self-collection result (intervention arm). Aim 1. Determine whether at-home HPV self-collection increases completion of cervical cancer screening among under-screened women offered enhanced reminders. Aim 2. Examine possible mechanisms explaining the intervention's effect, or lack of an effect. Aim 3. Estimate the incremental cost per additional woman completing screening of adding at-home HPV self-collection to enhanced reminders.
Minimum Age: 25 Years
Eligible Ages: ADULT
Sex: FEMALE
Healthy Volunteers: Yes
University of North Carolina Gillings School of Public Health, Chapel Hill, North Carolina, United States
Name: Jennifer S Smith, PhD
Affiliation: UNC Chapel Hill
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR