Cervical Screening Flashcards

1
Q

What will this deck cover:

A

The origins of cervical cancer and the process of HPV -> Cancer

The british cervical screening programme

A bit about Cervical cancer and its management

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2
Q

What are the risk factors for cervical cancer?

A
Early age of 1st intercourse
Multiple partners
Prolonged oral contraceptive use
Smoking
STIs
Immunodeficiency
Persistant infection
Age (Peaks at 45-55yrs)

MOST IMPORTANT IS HPV types 16 & 18

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3
Q

What types of cancer are caused by Types 16 & 18 HPV?

A
Most cervical and anal cancers
40% of penile & vaginal cancers
12% oropharyngeal 
3% mouth
(Dont bother learning the numbers just know almost all cervical cancers are due to HPV)
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4
Q

How does HPV lead to cancer?

A

So HPV infection causes abnormal growth of squamous cells aka Squamous Intraepithelial Lesion (SIL)
Which can progress to Cervical Intraepithelial Neoplasia (CIN), an abnormal proliferation & disarray of cells in the epithelium
This can then progressive to invasive cancer

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5
Q

How do we grade CIN?

A

1-3 based on proportion of affected cervix

CIN3 only progresses to cancer in 20-30% of untreated cases

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6
Q

How do we prevent HPV infections?

A

A secondary school immunisation programme for girls.

It’s now a 2 dose regime.

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7
Q

What is the aim of cervical screening?

A

To pick up PRE-CANCEROUS disease, essentially CIN

The whole point is to get there before it becomes cancerous

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8
Q

Describe the process of cervical screening, from smear to results

A

Smear taker enters request onto Scottish Cervical Call Recall System (SCCRS)

Lab tests virals and puts
results on SCCRS database

GP & women receive results

1) If HPV negative: come back in 5 yrs
2) If HPV positive:
- Cytology normal: come back in 1 year
- Cytology abnormal:colposcopy referral

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9
Q

How often do you get a cervical smear?

A

3yrly from age 25-50, then 5yrly after that

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10
Q

What method do we use to test for cervical abnormality?

A

Liquid based Cytology (LBC)

We take smears from the “transformation zone”, i.e. where the endocervical glandular epithelium becomes squamous cells

We also test the cells for HPV

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11
Q

Why do we call them PAP smears?

A

Cos a thin layer of cells is stained on a slide used the Papnicolaeou method

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12
Q

The lab looks for nuclear abnormalities in the cells called “Dyskariosis”, what are these abnormalities?

A
  • Increased size & nuclear:cytoplasmic ratio
  • Varied shape, size & outline of nuclei
  • Coarse irregular chromatin
  • Nucleoli
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13
Q

What are the possible results from a PAP smear?

A
  • Normal so come back in 3yrs
  • Borderline Nuclear Abnormalities (BNA) aka low grade dyskariosis = test HPV (+ve colposcopy, -ve return to normal programme)
  • High grade dyskaryosis - colposcopy
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14
Q

What is colposcopy?

A
We use magnification and a light to see the cervix
Then use Acetic acid +/- iodine to:
- Identify lesions
- Select biopsies
- Define area to treat
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15
Q

So Astrid’s been flagged up on smear and gone for colposcopy which showed up a lesion, how do we test it?

A

Punch biopsy:

If its CIN 2 or 3 we will treat

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16
Q

How can we treat a case of CIN?

A

LLETZ (Loop diathermy)
Cold Coagulation
Laser Ablation

17
Q

How do we follow up after treating CIN?

A

LBC & HPV test at 6 months
If both -ve your good an go back to 3yrly smears
IF either is +ve return to colposcopy

18
Q

Define Cervical Cancer itself?

A

A squamous carcinoma, its a malignant change in the squamous cells in the transformation zone of cervix

19
Q

How might cervical cancer present?

A

Abnormal vaginal bleeding including PCB, IMB or PMB
Discharge
Sometimes pain

20
Q

How do we stage cervical cancer?

A

With an EUA (Exam under anaesthesia)
PET-CT
MRI

21
Q

How do we diagnose it in the first place?

A

Based on clinical findings and biopsy

22
Q

How can cervical cancer be treated?

A

External Beam RT
Chemo - 5 cycles cisplatin
Caesium insertion (24hrs)

23
Q

Staging for cervical cancer

A
FIGO
1- Just cervix
2- Lower 2/3rds of vagina 
3A- Upper 1/3rd of vagina 
3B- Pelvic wall 
4A- Bladder/ rectum 
4B- distant metastases
24
Q

Which strains does the HPV vaccine target?

A

6/ 11/ 16/ 18

25
Q

What does HPV look like on histology

A
  • Cells have wrinkled nuclei
  • Multinucleation of cells
  • Koilocytosis
26
Q

How does HPV affect human cells?

A
  • Infects basal cells
  • Uses host for replication
  • As host cells mature they express viral genes
    E6: prevents cell cycle arrest
    E7: Inhbits cell death
27
Q

CIN 1

A
  • low grade dysplasia
  • Invades 1/3rd of epithelium
  • Likely to regress
28
Q

CIN2

A
  • Medium grade dysplasia

- Invades 2/3rds of epithelium

29
Q

CIN 3

A
  • High grade dysplasia
  • Unlikely to regress
  • Undifferetiated cells occupy the whole thickness of the epithelium