JCO Global Oncology (Jun 2023)

Self-Collection Cervical Screening in the Asia-Pacific Region: A Scoping Review of Implementation Evidence

  • Nicola Stephanie Creagh,
  • Lucy Ann Patricia Boyd,
  • Claire Bavor,
  • Claire Zammit,
  • Tessa Saunders,
  • Anu Mary Oommen,
  • Nicole Marion Rankin,
  • Julia Mary Louise Brotherton,
  • Claire Elizabeth Nightingale

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1200/GO.22.00297
Journal volume & issue
no. 9

Abstract

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PURPOSEAlthough cervical cancer is a disease of inequity, it can be eliminated as a public health problem through vaccination, screening, and treatment. Human papillomavirus vaginal self-collection cervical screening is a high-performance test that can increase reach of screening. This review describes the different contexts and models of care used to pilot or implement self-collection within the Asia-Pacific, measures the extent that implementation outcome measures are reported and, where available, summarizes key implementation findings.METHODSA scoping review was conducted by searching five databases of the peer-reviewed literature on June 20, 2022. Two researchers assessed eligibility and extracted data independently to the model of care used and the Conceptual Framework for Implementation Outcomes. A mixed-method consolidation of findings (quantitative: count and frequencies; qualitative: content analysis) was undertaken to narratively report findings.RESULTSFifty-seven articles, comprising 50 unique studies from 11 countries and two special autonomous regions, were included; 82% were conducted in trials. The implementation of self-collection was conducted in low- (2%), lower-middle– (32%), upper-middle– (32%), and high-income (35%) settings, with 10 different delivery models used; 80% delivered through practitioner-supported models with diversity in how samples were processed, and treatment was offered. Acceptability (73%) and appropriateness (64%) measures were most reported, followed by adoption (57%), feasibility (48%), and fidelity (38%). Only 7% of articles reported implementation cost or penetration measures. No articles reported sustainability measures.CONCLUSIONThe literature confirms that self-collection cervical screening has been implemented within the Asia-Pacific region, with evidence demonstrating that it is acceptable and appropriate from the user's perspective. Well-designed, high-quality implementation trials and real-world evaluations of self-collection that report the breadth of implementation outcomes can support the progression toward the elimination of cervical cancer.