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Brief Title: Screen and Treat for Cervical Cancer Prevention
Official Title: Safety and Efficacy of Two Screen-and-Treat Approaches for the Prevention of Cervical Cancer
Study ID: NCT00233727
Brief Summary: The study measures the impact of "screen-and-treat" on the prevalence of high-grade cervical intraepithelial neoplasia and cancer (CIN 2+). It is a three-arm, randomized clinical trial comparing two "screen-and-treat" approaches to delayed evaluation as a control. The primary outcome is biopsy-confirmed CIN 2+ at 6 months and significant complications within 6 months of randomization with continued follow-up to detect CIN2+ and other complications up to 36 months post-randomization.
Detailed Description: Participants and Clinical Examinations: Unscreened, non-pregnant women 35-65 years of age are enrolled at three closely located clinical sites in Khayelitsha, South Africa. All women provide informed consent, receive counseling for confidential HIV serotesting, a questionnaire, a pregnancy test if not postmenopausal, anonymous HIV serotesting, and a vaginal speculum examination by nurses trained in visual inspection of the cervix with acetic acid (VIA). Cervical specimens are obtained for testing for N. gonorrhea, Chlamydia trachomatis and high-risk types of HPV, and cytology. The cervix is washed with 5% acetic acid and inspected for gross abnormalities or areas of acetowhitening and a 35 mm. photograph taken. Women with significant cervicitis or vulvovaginitis are treated using the syndromic approach. N. gonorrhea or Chlamydia trachomatis positive women receive appropriate therapy. A positive VIA examination is defined as any acetowhite lesion and no attempt is made to differentiate the acetowhitening of metaplasia from CIN. Women with lesions suspicious for cancer, large acetowhite lesions extending over 70% of the cervix or into endocervical canal, and 374 unsuitable for cryotherapy due to severe atrophy, polyps, cervix distorted, cervix not adequately visualized are excluded. These women are referred to colposcopy. Women are asked to return 2-6 days later for randomization to either: (1) HPV arm in which all HPV DNA positive women receive cryotherapy; (2) VIA arm in which all VIA positive women receive cryotherapy; and (3) a delayed evaluation arm in which women are followed untreated, irrespective of HPV or VIA status. Randomization is done at a patient level using a computer-generated randomization schedule with arm assignments provided to the clinics in sealed envelopes. Cryotherapy is performed by a nurse using N2O and a cryosurgical unit (Wallach Surgical Devices, Orange, CT) using two 3-minute freezes. Cytology results are not available at the time of cryotherapy. Both treated and untreated women are asked to return at 4 weeks for a questionnaire. At 6 months, colposcopy is done by a physician blinded to arm and clinical information. All acetowhite lesions are biopsied and all have an endocervical curettage. Women with CIN 2+ are treated with LEEP. Examinations in women who became pregnant during the study are postponed until three months post-partum. Blood for anonymous HIV serotesting is obtained. All women who were HPV or VIA-positive at enrollment and a subset who were HPV and VIA-negative (all women enrolled in 2002) are scheduled for repeat colposcopy at 12 months, 24 months and 36 months post-randomization. At these visits, cervical samples are collected and colposcopy and biopsy if indicated is performed. Laboratory Testing: HPV testing is done using the Hybrid Capture 2 HPV DNA assay and high-risk probe mixture (Digene Corporation, Gaithersburg, MD) at the University of Cape Town. Biopsies are processed at Columbia University and blindly evaluated by a single pathologist.
Minimum Age: 35 Years
Eligible Ages: ADULT, OLDER_ADULT
Sex: FEMALE
Healthy Volunteers: Yes
University of Cape Town, Cape Town, Western Cape, South Africa
Name: Lynette Denny, MD
Affiliation: University of Cape Town
Role: STUDY_DIRECTOR
Name: Thomas C Wright, MD
Affiliation: Columbia University
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR