CANCER CARE

Why You Need Cervical Cancer Screening

By Temma Ehrenfeld  @temmaehrenfeld
 | 
May 18, 2023
Why You Need Cervical Cancer Screening

Too many women are dying of cervical cancer. The problem is not enough women are following Pap smear guidelines and getting cervical cancer screening.

Cancer of the cervix can be treated — if it is caught early. But the U.S. death rate from the disease is much higher than observers had estimated. The problem is that too many women aren’t not following Pap smear guidelines, which advice when to have cervical cancer screening, the researchers said.

Overall, about 14,000 cases are diagnosed each year, with more than 4,000 women dying from the cancer.

But black women in this country die at rates comparable to that of women in poor countries. They are 75 percent more likely to die from cervical cancer than white women. A study that analyzed data for more than 15,000 patients with advanced cervical cancer found that more than half did not receive treatment considered to be standard of care.

Other research found that having insurance makes a significant difference. Young women with insurance are more likely to follow Pap smear guidelines and get tested and receive appropriate treatment.

 

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What causes cervical cancer?

Cervical cancer is caused by an abnormal immune response to the sexually transmitted virus HPV, or human papillomavirus. You can’t avoid HPV because condoms do not prevent it, but most people’s immune system can fight it off. When people do develop cancer from the virus, the cancer shows up 10 to 20 years after the first exposure.

The incidence of cervical cancer in the United States has dropped by more than half in the past 30 years because of widespread screening. Pap smears reliably identify cervical cancers. Research suggests that they could eventually detect cancer in the uterus and ovaries as well.

About 20 percent of women in the United States have a hysterectomy, often for excessive bleeding and fibroids. They don’t have a cervix, so they can’t get cancer of the cervix.

To protect yourself (or your daughter), make sure you have received the tests and vaccines for HPV on the recommended schedule. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommends that 11- to 12-year-old girls get two doses of HPV vaccine, separated by 6 to 12 months. Girls and women ages 13 through 26 who have not yet had the two shots should get them as well. There is also a vaccine for boys.

Pap smear guidelines

You still need to get Pap smears even if you have been vaccinated, since the vaccine doesn’t prevent all types of cervical cancer.

 

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Under the cervical cancer screening guidelines from the American Congress of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG), women should get their first Pap test at age 21. After that you should have a Pap test every three years — around age 24 and ages 27 and 30. If those three tests are normal, you can continue having a Pap test every three years, or even better, have a Pap test and an HPV test together every five years. After 65, you can stop getting the test if you’ve had normal results previously.

Women who have a total hysterectomy — which removes the uterus and cervix — for a noncancerous condition can stop having them.

Gynecologists have grown used to giving women tests every year. But ACOG, the group of obstetricians and gynecologists, changed the cervical cancer screening guidelines because those yearly tests can lead to unnecessary and possibly harmful surgery. Young women, especially, develop abnormalities in the cervix that seem to be precancerous but can go away if they’re left alone. When those growths show up on a Pap tests, doctors often remove them. In the process, they may injure the cervix.

Because cervical cancer develops so slowly, over 10 to 20 years, a test every three years will catch one, the ACOG group concluded. Anyone who has had an HIV infection or any condition that could suppress their immune system should get tested more often.

If cervical cancer is caught early through a Pap smear, the dangerous tissue can be removed with a procedure called a cone biopsy. But if the cancer is at a later stage, more tissue will need to be removed.

M. Margaret Kemeny, MD, who runs the Queens Cancer Center of Queens Hospital, a public hospital in New York, reports that she has treated many younger women of color who had never had Pap smears and developed cervical cancer. She mentioned two patients, each with recurring cervical cancer, one Chinese, the other Hispanic. She had to remove each woman’s cervix, vagina, rectum, and bladder, and insert bags that are worn outside the body to collect urine and stool. “One was 39,” Kemeny said, “and the other was 25.”

 

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Updated:  

May 18, 2023

Reviewed By:  

Christopher Nystuen, MD, MBA