Novel biomarkers with promising benefits for diagnosis of cervical neoplasia: a systematic review
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Publication Date
2020Author
Calleb George Onyango, Lilian Ogonda, Bernard Guyah, Clement Shiluli, Gregory Ganda, Omenge Elkanah Orang’o, Kirtika Patel
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Show full item recordAbstract/ Overview
Background: Cervical cancer screening is slowly transitioning from Pappanicolaou cytologic screening to primary
Visual Inspection with Acetic Acid (VIA) or HPV testing as an effort to enhance early detection and treatment.
However, an effective triage tests needed to decide who among the VIA or HPV positive women should receive
further diagnostic evaluation to avoid unnecessary colposcopy referrals is still lacking. Evidence from experimental
studies have shown potential usefulness of Squamous Cell Carcinoma Antigen (SCC Ag), Macrophage Colony
Stimulating Factor (M-CSF), Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor (VEGF), MicroRNA, p16INKa / ki-67, HPV E6/E7/mRNA,
and DNA methylation biomarkers in detecting premalignant cervical neoplasia. Given the variation in performance,
and scanty review studies in this field, this systematic review described the diagnostic performance of some
selected assays to detect high-grade cervical intraepithelial neoplasia (CIN2+) with histology as gold standard.
Methods: We systematically searched articles published in English between 2012 and 2020 using key words from
PubMed/Medline and SCOPUS with two reviewers assessing study eligibility, and risk of bias. We performed a
descriptive presentation of the performance of each of the selected assays for the detection of CIN2 + .
Results: Out of 298 citations retrieved, 58 articles were included. Participants with cervical histology yielded CIN2+
proportion range of 13.7–88.4%. The diagnostic performance of the assays to detect CIN2+ was; 1) SCC-Ag: range
sensitivity of 78.6–81.2%, specificity 74–100%. 2) M-CSF: sensitivity of 68–87.7%, specificity 64.7–94% 3) VEGF:
sensitivity of 56–83.5%, specificity 74.6–96%. 4) MicroRNA: sensitivity of 52.9–67.3%, specificity 76.4–94.4%. 5)
p16INKa / ki-67: sensitivity of 50–100%, specificity 39–90.4%. 6) HPV E6/E7/mRNA: sensitivity of 65–100%, specificity
42.7–90.2%, and 7) DNA methylation: sensitivity of 59.7–92.9%, specificity 67–98%.
Conclusion: Overall, the reported test performance and the receiving operating characteristics curves implies that
implementation of p16ink4a/ki-67 assay as a triage for HPV positive women to be used at one visit with subsequent
cryotherapy treatment is feasible. For the rest of assays, more robust clinical translation studies with larger consecutive
cohorts of women participants is recommended.