Patient vs. clinician-collected cervical cytology for screening for CIN: a systematic review and meta-analysis
Greg Marchand, Daniela Gonzalez Herrera, Brooke Hamilton, McKenna Robinson, Emily Kline, Sarah Mera, Michelle Koshaba, Greenley Jephson, Nidhi Pulicherla, Ali Azadi

TL;DR
This study compares self-collected and clinician-collected cervical cytology for detecting cervical cancer, finding that self-collection could help more women get screened, though it's slightly less accurate.
Contribution
The study provides a meta-analysis of self-collected cervical cytology's diagnostic accuracy compared to clinician-collected methods, highlighting its potential for increasing screening participation.
Findings
Self-collected cytology had a pooled sensitivity of 0.698 and specificity of 0.805.
Clinician-collected cytology showed higher sensitivity (0.765) but lower specificity (0.613).
Variation in self-collection methods affects diagnostic performance, suggesting a need for standardization.
Abstract
This systematic review and meta-analysis aimed to compare the diagnostic accuracy of self-collected versus clinician-collected cervical cytology for screening for cervical intraepithelial neoplasia (CIN), using cervical biopsy histopathology as the reference standard. The study sought to evaluate self-collection’s potential to enhance cervical cancer screening participation, particularly among under-screened women, by addressing barriers such as discomfort and logistical challenges. We searched PubMed (MEDLINE), Web of Science, Scopus, and Cochrane databases from their inception to March 1, 2024, to identify relevant studies comparing self-collected and clinician-collected cervical cytology. Eligible studies included adult women (≥18 years) undergoing both self-collected and clinician-collected cervical cytology (conventional Pap smear or liquid-based cytology), with cervical biopsy…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCervical Cancer and HPV Research · Ovarian cancer diagnosis and treatment · Lymphadenopathy Diagnosis and Analysis
