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Brian Befano, Jayashree Kalpathy-Cramer, Didem Egemen, Federica Inturrisi, José Jeronimo, Ana Cecilia Rodríguez, Nicole Campos, Miriam Cremer, Ana Ribeiro, Kayode Olusegun Ajenifuja, Andrew Goldstein, Amna Haider, Karen Yeates, Margaret Madeleine, Teresa Norris, Jaqueline Figueroa, Karla Alfaro, Tainá Raiol, Clement Adepiti, Judith Norman, George Kassim Chilinda, Bariki Mchome, Yeycy Donastorg, Xolisili Dlamini, Gabriel Conzuelo, Adekunbiola A Banjo, Pauline Chone, Alex Mremi, Arismendi Benitez, Zeev Rosberger, Te Vantha, Ignacio Prieto-Egido, Jen Boyd-Morin, Christopher Clark, Scott Kinder, Nicolas Wentzensen, Kanan Desai, Rebecca Perkins, Silvia de Sanjosé, Mark Schiffman, on behalf of the PAVE Consortium, Initial evaluation of a new cervical screening strategy combining human papillomavirus genotyping and automated visual evaluation: the Human Papillomavirus–Automated Visual Evaluation Consortium, JNCI: Journal of the National Cancer Institute, 2025;, djaf054, https://doi.org/10.1093/jnci/djaf054
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Abstract
The HPV-Automated Visual Evaluation (PAVE) Consortium is validating a cervical screening strategy enabling accurate cervical screening in resource-limited settings. A rapid, low-cost HPV assay permits sensitive HPV testing of self-collected vaginal specimens; HPV-negative women are reassured. Triage of positives combines HPV genotyping (four groups in order of cancer risk) and visual inspection assisted by automated cervical visual evaluation (AVE) that classifies cervical appearance as severe, indeterminate, or normal. Together, the combination predicts which women have precancer, permitting targeted management to those most needing treatment.
We analyzed CIN3+ yield for each PAVE risk level (HPV genotype crossed by AVE classification) from nine clinical sites (Brazil, Cambodia, Dominican Republic, El Salvador, Eswatini, Honduras, Malawi, Nigeria, and Tanzania). Data from 1832 HPV-positive participants confirmed that HPV genotype and AVE classification each strongly and independently predict risk of histologic CIN3+. The combination of these low-cost tests provided excellent risk stratification, warranting pre-implementation demonstration projects.
- patient evaluation
- human papillomavirus
- brazil
- cambodia
- dominican republic
- el salvador
- genotype
- honduras
- malawi
- nigeria
- precancerous conditions
- eswatini
- tanzania
- triage
- vagina
- human papillomavirus test
- cancer risk
- stratification
- inspection
- genotype determination
- health service demonstration project
- cyclophosphamide/doxorubicin/etoposide
- resource-limited settings