Abnormal Pap Smear

In the December 8th issue of the New England Journal of Medicine in the Perspective section, there appears an article, “Making Sense of the New Cervical Cancer Screening Guidelines,” by Dr. S. Feldman.  Dr. Feldman concedes that Pap smear sensitivity is poor, “roughly 50 to 60% [false negative].  She does not in her article explain the relatively poor sensitivity of the test but we can learn easily from other literature that a major contribution to the poor sensitivity of the test relates to improperly identified or interpreted smears.

 

While it is true that multiplying the frequency of smears increases the likelihood in spite of negligent readings that a cervical abnormality will be discovered while the disease is pre-invasive.  There is no study randomized and prospective which proves that.  Someone has simply picked out of a hat a frequency that they think is greater than needed and a frequency that is somehow lesser than needed and it comes to kind of a consensus that after age 21 every three years is frequent enough.

 

Cervical cancer is a very aggressive disease particularly in women who acquire the disease in their 30’s and 40’s.  No intelligent woman knowing she possessed a cervical abnormality would decide to wait three years to do something about it.  Where therefore does the pressure come from to reduce the frequency of looking?  Most women considered healthy to have their gynecologist see them annually and Pap smears are done at this annual exam.  Pap smears are relatively inexpensive.  Of course, even something that is inexpensive becomes expensive when you multiply it by 100,000,000.

 

On the other hand, if a lab is getting $25.00 to $30.00 for every Pap smear it screens and requires the cytotechnologists (not doctors)  who read the slides to read as many as 100 a day, one can see readily where the money is going.

 

I recently questioned during a deposition a cytotechnologist who had screened a slide with obvious severe abnormalities on it which she had in fact marked with screening dots.  She doesn’t know why she put the slide back in the box but she did.  She was having difficult times in her personal life which she had shared with her supervisors and others at the organization that was requiring her to perform as many as 96 screenings a day in spite of her obvious distraction.

 

While 4,000 to 5,000 women are needlessly dying of cervical cancer in the United States every year, cost efficiency is truly in the mind of the beholder.

 

In her article Dr. Feldman goes on to assert that HPV testing done with Pap smears, though recommended by the American Cancer Society every three years, is not recommended by anyone else including the United States Preventative Services Task Force.

 

It is well-know that women who are HPV positive are at much higher risk of developing cervical cancer in women who do not have this characteristic.  It is also well recognized that any sexual encounter with a new person, particularly if it is unprotected sex could result in the transmission of HPV.  Therefore, the fact that a person in a committed relationship is negative for ten years doesn’t mean that they are going to be negative for the next ten.

 

I keep on writing about this even though few hear what I have to say.  It is simply that I am tired of watching my clients die of cervical cancer that was preventable if a person had been allowed to spend more than eight minutes reviewing their slide or were willing to endure the further expense of subjecting the slide to HPV testing.  I wonder which committee of government or the prestigious professional organizations that direct these policies think they are in a position to decide what a woman’s life is worth.  Perhaps if they watched more women die of cervical cancer as has been my unfortunate experience, they would find that testing every year rather than every three and adding HPV testing is cost efficient.

 

What do you think?

 

Jerry I. Meyers

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The Archives of Internal Medicine, June 22, 2009, published results of a retrospective medical record review involving nineteen community based and four academic medical center primary care practices.  The researchers were intent upon examining how frequently patients were not informed of clinically significant abnormal outpatient test results.  The researcher’s conclusion was that it is common for patients to be uninformed of significant abnormal outpatient test results and they suggest a simple process currently not being followed by most primary caregivers to correct what the researchers see as a problem.

Remarkably, they fail to comment on an additional meaningful conclusion that can be arrived at from examining the same data.  The doctors who didn’t inform their patients must not have done anything about the abnormal lab results.  Surely, it is not possible that physicians failed to inform patients of significant abnormal lab results only in cases where the lab results, though abnormal, suggested no need for a different course of medical treatment.  Perhaps a more important issue for these researchers to have examined is whether the results were communicated to the doctor and whether the doctor incorporated those results in the formulation of each patient’s continued and future course of care.

In these circumstances, a patient’s safeguard of last resort is their own interest in their medical care.  Patients need to be attentive not just in the outpatient setting but also in the hospital setting.  A patient should not assume that because there are a number of people who seem involved in their care, doctors, nurses, etc., that someone in fact is aware of all clinical events and test results and is thoughtfully guiding the patient’s care with a professional interest in the best possible outcome.

Learn more about abnormal pap smears.

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Women Beware

December 16, 2008

Your rights to proper and regular screening for cervical cancer by pap smears and other means is being attacked. In a recent publication of a British Medical Journal (October 13, 2008), the findings of a joint European study are reported. The purpose of the study was to establish whether frequent HPV and Pap smears are [...]

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