Cervical Cancer Screening - Pap Patrol Power
- Goal: Detect & treat precancerous lesions (Cervical Intraepithelial Neoplasia - CIN) and early invasive cancer, reducing morbidity/mortality.
- Screening Modalities:
- Cytology (Pap Smear): Liquid-Based Cytology (LBC) preferred. Results via Bethesda System (e.g., ASC-US, LSIL, HSIL).
- HPV DNA Testing: Detects high-risk HPV (hrHPV). Preferred primary screening method globally.
- Visual Inspection with Acetic Acid (VIA) / Lugol’s Iodine (VILI): Cost-effective for low-resource settings.
- Key Guidelines (India - MOHFW/FOGSI):
- Target Age: 30-65 years.
- HPV Test (Preferred): Every 5 years.
- Pap Smear: Every 3 years.
- VIA/VILI: Every 5 years (where HPV/Pap not feasible).
- WHO: Recommends hrHPV testing from age 30 (every 5-10 yrs) or cytology/VIA (every 3 yrs). Stop at 65 with adequate negative history.

⭐ Persistent infection with high-risk HPV types, primarily HPV 16 and 18, is responsible for over 70% of cervical cancers.
Ovarian Cancer Screening - Elusive Egg Snatchers
- No effective population screening for asymptomatic, average-risk women; leads to more harm than benefit.
- Challenges: Low incidence, lack of pre-malignant stage, poor specificity of CA-125 & Transvaginal Sonography (TVS) in general population.
- High-Risk Groups (Genetic Predisposition):
- BRCA1 mutation: Lifetime risk ~40-50%.
- BRCA2 mutation: Lifetime risk ~15-25%.
- Lynch syndrome (HNPCC): Risk ~5-12%.
- Strong family history.
- Management in High-Risk:
- Screening: Consider CA-125 & TVS every 6 months from age 30-35 (or 5-10 yrs before earliest familial diagnosis).
- Risk-Reducing Salpingo-oophorectomy (RRSO): Recommended after childbearing, typically ages 35-40 for BRCA1, 40-45 for BRCA2. Reduces ovarian cancer risk by >80%.
⭐ The majority of high-grade serous ovarian cancers, the most common type, are now thought to originate in the fimbrial end of the fallopian tube (Serous Tubal Intraepithelial Carcinoma - STIC).
Endometrial Cancer Screening - Womb Wellness Watch
No routine population screening. Focus on symptomatic & high-risk individuals.
- Primary Symptom for Investigation: Postmenopausal Bleeding (PMB).
- High-Risk Groups (Consider Screening/Early Investigation):
- Lynch Syndrome (HNPCC): Annual TVS & endometrial biopsy from age 30-35.
- History of unopposed estrogen therapy.
- Tamoxifen use (monitor for PMB, routine ET screening not standard).
- Obesity, PCOS, diabetes, nulliparity.
- PMB Evaluation Pathway:
- Initial: Transvaginal Sonography (TVS).
- Endometrial Thickness (ET) ≤ 4mm: Low risk if bleeding resolves. Re-evaluate if PMB persists/recurs.
- ET > 4mm (or any thickness if on Tamoxifen & PMB): Endometrial biopsy.
- Gold Standard: Endometrial Biopsy (e.g., Pipelle, D&C).
- Initial: Transvaginal Sonography (TVS).

⭐ Any postmenopausal bleeding (PMB) is considered endometrial cancer until proven otherwise; it's the presenting symptom in >90% of cases.
High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- Cervical Cancer: Pap smear (ages 21-29, every 3 years). Ages 30-65: Co-testing (Pap+HPV DNA) every 5 years or Pap alone every 3 years.
- HPV Vaccination: Crucial for primary prevention of most cervical cancers.
- Ovarian Cancer: No routine screening for average-risk women. CA-125 & TVS considered for high-risk (e.g., BRCA).
- Endometrial Cancer: No routine screening. Postmenopausal bleeding (PMB) is a red flag. Annual biopsy for Lynch syndrome.
- Vulvar/Vaginal Cancers: No specific population screening; often detected via routine pelvic exam findings.
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