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National Cervical Screening Programme Changing the primary laboratory test Public consultation October 2015 Presentation overview • Success of the NCSP today • What is HPV? • HPV immunisation • Future directions – changing the primary screening test • Public consultation – what do you think? NCSP Key Messages • Our NCSP is one of the most successful cervical screening programmes in the world. • Cervical cancer is one of the most preventable cancers and screening women every three years reduces the risk of developing it by up to 90 percent. • We are reducing the incidence and mortality rate of cervical cancer by detecting and treating pre-cancerous squamous cell changes. Reducing the incidence and mortality of cervical cancer Source: Cervical Cancer : Symptoms, Stages and Treatment. www.medicinenet.com493 × 335 What is HPV? • HPV is a common virus • Infects both men and women • It usually has no signs or symptoms and mostly goes away on its own • Some types cause cancers, including cervical cancer Parkin, D. M and Gray, F. 2006. Chapter 2: The burden of HPV-related cancers. Vaccine, 31(24)S3, 11-25 HPV immunisation • • Immunisation and screening offer the most effective protection against cervical cancer. More Māori and Pacific women are HPV immunised than other ethnic groups. • Protects against high-risk HPV (16 and18) that cause up to 70% of cervical cancer. Also protects against genital warts (HPV 6 and 11). The vaccine does not protect against all hrHPV types. • Immunised or not, women still need to participate in regular cervical screening. Future direction - Changing the test Moving to HPV primary screening in NZ • • WHO recommends hrHPV primary screening and many countries are implementing HPV primary screening programmes A woman still needs to have a smear • Less frequent screening: every 5 years instead of 3 • Possible age range 25 – 69 • Possibility of self-sampling for some women, could reduce barriers to accessing screening Potential benefits of HPV primary screening: • Fewer cervical cancer cases and deaths • Fewer smears throughout a woman’s life • Better detection of risk of precancerous cervical cell changes • Effective for HPV vaccinated, and those who are not • • Test interpretation is less subjective Opportunity for some women to do HPV self-sampling for women • New Zealand programme remains consistent with internationally recognised best practice Next steps • • Public consultation during October 2015 What do you think? www.nsu.govt.nz • Nothing changes until 2018! Questions?