Early Detection: Downstaging for Cervical Cancer
On a population basis, cervical and oral cancers lend themselves best to downstaging through a process of visual inspection in a country where a full screening program is not yet feasible (WHO, 1995).
Implementation for cervical cancer requires several steps:
The natural history of cervical cancer is long. With the onset of sexual activity at about age 13, cervical dysplasia appears about age 18 through 35 years. Only about 8% of cervical cancers are seen during this period, so that examinations here are unlikely to find many cancers. Carcinoma in situ begins about age 35 years through to about age 50 when invasive cancers begin to appear as a prelude to death at about age 55. Since about 92% of cervical cancers appear between ages 35 and 50, this is the age range to target where examinations will be most cost-effective. In some countries a virulent form of cervical cancer is appearing in young women, sometimes in their early 20s. In this kind of situation the age recommendations have to be modified appropriately.
As with prevention programs, process, impact and outcome measures are used to monitor and evaluate secondary prevention programs. For cervical cancer downstaging, examples might include (WHO,1995):
Process Measures
More than 80% of women in the 35-50 year target group are educated on cervical cancer.
More than 80% of primary health workers are educated and trained in visual examination of
the cervix.
Impact Measures:
Over 80% of women in the target 35-50 year group are examined at least once.Outcome
Measures
Short Term: More than one-third of cervical cancers are discovered by examination
Medium Term There is more than a third reduction in cases presenting with advanced disease
(stage II and beyond).
Long Term: There is more than a third reduction in the mortality of cervical cancer.