Direct notification of cervical cytology results to women improves follow-up in cervical cancer screening - A cluster-randomised trial

Up to half of all women do not receive follow-up as recommended after cervical cytology testing and are thus at increased risk of dysplasia progression. Women from lower social positions are at increased risk of not receiving follow-up. Sample takers, often general practitioners, convey results to w...

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Main Authors: Bettina Kjær Kristiansen, Berit Andersen, Flemming Bro, Hans Svanholm, Peter Vedsted
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2019-03-01
Series:Preventive Medicine Reports
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2211335518302730
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spelling doaj-78de8430c1d045778ad0f741fbbb7e802020-11-24T21:47:55ZengElsevierPreventive Medicine Reports2211-33552019-03-0113118125Direct notification of cervical cytology results to women improves follow-up in cervical cancer screening - A cluster-randomised trialBettina Kjær Kristiansen0Berit Andersen1Flemming Bro2Hans Svanholm3Peter Vedsted4Research Unit for General Practice, Department of Public Health, Aarhus University, 8000 Aarhus, Denmark; Department for Public Health Programmes, Randers Regional Hospital, 8930 Randers, Denmark; Corresponding author at: Research Unit for General Practice, Department of Public Health, Aarhus University, 8000 Aarhus, Denmark.Department for Public Health Programmes, Randers Regional Hospital, 8930 Randers, DenmarkResearch Unit for General Practice, Department of Public Health, Aarhus University, 8000 Aarhus, DenmarkDepartment of Pathology, Randers Regional Hospital, 8930 Randers, DenmarkResearch Centre for Cancer Diagnosis in Primary Care (CaP), Department of Public Health, Aarhus University, 8000 Aarhus, DenmarkUp to half of all women do not receive follow-up as recommended after cervical cytology testing and are thus at increased risk of dysplasia progression. Women from lower social positions are at increased risk of not receiving follow-up. Sample takers, often general practitioners, convey results to women, but communication problems constitute a challenge. We aimed to investigate the effect of direct notification of cervical cytology results on follow-up rates.In a 1:1 cluster-randomised controlled trial, we assessed if having the pathology department convey cervical cytology results directly to the investigated women improved timely follow-up, compared with conveying the results via the general practitioner as usual. All women with a cervical cytology performed in a general practice in the Central Denmark Region (2013–2014) and receiving follow-up recommendation were included (n = 11,833).The proportion of women without timely follow-up was lower in the group with direct notifications than in the control group of women receiving usual care, regardless of age, educational status, cohabitation status and ethnicity. Among the women with the most severe cervical cytology diagnoses who are recommended gynaecological follow-up within 3 months, the percentage without timely follow-up was 15.1% in the intervention group and 19.5% in the control group (prevalence difference: −0.04 (95%CI: −0.07; −0.02)). Improved timely follow-up was also observed for women with a recommendation to have follow-up performed at 3 and 12 months.Cervical cytology results conveyed directly by letter to women increased the proportion of women with timely follow-up without raising inequality in follow-up measured by social position.Trial registration: ClinicalTrials.gov (TRN: NCT02002468) 29 November 2013. Keywords: General practice, Uterine cervical dysplasia, Mass screening, Early detection of cancer, Socioeconomic factors, Quality of health carehttp://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2211335518302730
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Bettina Kjær Kristiansen
Berit Andersen
Flemming Bro
Hans Svanholm
Peter Vedsted
spellingShingle Bettina Kjær Kristiansen
Berit Andersen
Flemming Bro
Hans Svanholm
Peter Vedsted
Direct notification of cervical cytology results to women improves follow-up in cervical cancer screening - A cluster-randomised trial
Preventive Medicine Reports
author_facet Bettina Kjær Kristiansen
Berit Andersen
Flemming Bro
Hans Svanholm
Peter Vedsted
author_sort Bettina Kjær Kristiansen
title Direct notification of cervical cytology results to women improves follow-up in cervical cancer screening - A cluster-randomised trial
title_short Direct notification of cervical cytology results to women improves follow-up in cervical cancer screening - A cluster-randomised trial
title_full Direct notification of cervical cytology results to women improves follow-up in cervical cancer screening - A cluster-randomised trial
title_fullStr Direct notification of cervical cytology results to women improves follow-up in cervical cancer screening - A cluster-randomised trial
title_full_unstemmed Direct notification of cervical cytology results to women improves follow-up in cervical cancer screening - A cluster-randomised trial
title_sort direct notification of cervical cytology results to women improves follow-up in cervical cancer screening - a cluster-randomised trial
publisher Elsevier
series Preventive Medicine Reports
issn 2211-3355
publishDate 2019-03-01
description Up to half of all women do not receive follow-up as recommended after cervical cytology testing and are thus at increased risk of dysplasia progression. Women from lower social positions are at increased risk of not receiving follow-up. Sample takers, often general practitioners, convey results to women, but communication problems constitute a challenge. We aimed to investigate the effect of direct notification of cervical cytology results on follow-up rates.In a 1:1 cluster-randomised controlled trial, we assessed if having the pathology department convey cervical cytology results directly to the investigated women improved timely follow-up, compared with conveying the results via the general practitioner as usual. All women with a cervical cytology performed in a general practice in the Central Denmark Region (2013–2014) and receiving follow-up recommendation were included (n = 11,833).The proportion of women without timely follow-up was lower in the group with direct notifications than in the control group of women receiving usual care, regardless of age, educational status, cohabitation status and ethnicity. Among the women with the most severe cervical cytology diagnoses who are recommended gynaecological follow-up within 3 months, the percentage without timely follow-up was 15.1% in the intervention group and 19.5% in the control group (prevalence difference: −0.04 (95%CI: −0.07; −0.02)). Improved timely follow-up was also observed for women with a recommendation to have follow-up performed at 3 and 12 months.Cervical cytology results conveyed directly by letter to women increased the proportion of women with timely follow-up without raising inequality in follow-up measured by social position.Trial registration: ClinicalTrials.gov (TRN: NCT02002468) 29 November 2013. Keywords: General practice, Uterine cervical dysplasia, Mass screening, Early detection of cancer, Socioeconomic factors, Quality of health care
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2211335518302730
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