CIN and Cervical Cancer Flashcards
How often do a) 25-29yrs b) 30-65yrs and c) high risk patients undergo cervical screening?
a) Every 3 years
b) Every 5 years
c) Annually
What are benefits of liquid cytology vs conventional cytology?
- Higher sensitivity (80-90%)
- Less frequent screening
- Computer-assisted
- Tests for HPV, chlamydia, gonorrhoea
Disadvantage = more expensive
What are the three grades in the Bethesda classification of cervical cytology?
i) low grade squamous intraepithelial lesion (LSIL)
ii) high grade squamous intraepithelial lesion (HSIL)
iii) query squamous cell carcinoma
What is ASCUS?
Atypical squamous cells of undetermined significance (test for HPV - colposcopy)
Where does HPV typically affect?
Cells at the transitional zone
What does HPV 6,11 cause?
What does HPV 16,18 cause?
Genital warts
Cervical cancer
How is CIN graded?
CIN 1 (mild)
CIN 2 (moderate)
CIN 3 (severe)
Carcinoma in situ
Invasive carcinoma
What are risk factors for CIN?
- Multiple sexual partners
- High risk sexual partner
- Smoking
- Immunocompromised
- Low socioeconomic class
What are the two types of technique used to treat CIN?
Ablation (cryotherapy, laser ablation)
Excision (LLETZ, laser cone excision, cold knife conisation)
What are the complications of LLETZ?
Bleeding
Infection
Vasovagal
Cervical stenosis
Cervical incompetence
What are the two types of cervical cancer? Which HPV strain causes which?
Squamous cell carcinoma (HPV 16) - 90%
Adenocarcinoma (HPV 18) - 10%
What lymph nodes does cervical cancer spread to?
Parametrial nodes
What are the symptoms of cervical cancer?
What are the examination findings?
Intermenstrual/post-coital/post-menopausal bleeding, pelvic pain, systemic symptoms
Hard, glandular erosion/ulceration
Contact bleeding
Intense acetowhite uptake
How is cervical cancer diagnosed?
Colposcopy + punch biopsy
CT/MRI abdo pelvis (staging)
EUA
What is the FIGO staging of cervical cancer?
1 Confined to cervix
2 Involves proximal 2/3 of vagina
3 Spread to pelvis
4 Distant metastases