Follow up of women with a history of mildly abnormal cervical smears which have returned to normal without treatment |
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Authors: | A. HERBERT M. GREGORY H. F. WAGSTAFF |
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Affiliation: | Department of Histopathology, Southampton General Hospital, Southampton, UK;University of Southampton, Southampton, UK |
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Abstract: | The progress of 124 women with at least two negative cervical smears following a history of mildly abnormal smears for which no treatment had been given was compared with 106 women with negative smears and a clinical history of genital warts or herpes virus infection and 460 age-matched controls. After 4 years, excluding those for whom there was no follow up, 5.8% of those with a history of abnormal smears, none of those with a clinical history of genital warts or herpes virus and 1.1% of controls had developed histological evidence of at least cervical intraepithelial neoplasia grade III (CINIII) when referred for investigation of subsequent abnormal smears; one woman, from the control group, had developed invasive cervical cancer. Women with two negative smears after a history of abnormal smears who subsequently developed CINIII were more likely to have had a previous smear reported as moderate or mild-moderate dyskaryosis (2/6) compared with those whose follow up was negative (2/89). the results suggest that two negative cervical smears may not necessarily indicate that a lesion has regressed, but that a clinical history of genital warts or herpes virus infection should not be an indication for increased surveillance. |
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Keywords: | cervical cytology cervical intraepithelial neoplasia cytological surveillance mildly abnormal cervical smears human papillomavirus herpes virus |
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