rss
J Clin Pathol doi:10.1136/jcp.2007.052308

Role of age stratification for colposcopy referral following initial diagnosis of mild dyskaryosis.

  1. Stephen Crowther (stephencrowther{at}hotmail.com)
  1. St Lukes Hospital, Rathgar Dublin 6, Republic of Ireland
    1. Leslie Turner
    1. St Lukes Hospital, Rathgar Dublin 6, Republic of Ireland
      1. Derek Magee
      1. St Lukes Hospital, Rathgar Dublin 6, Republic of Ireland
        1. David Gibbons
        1. St Lukes Hospital, Rathgar Dublin 6, Republic of Ireland
          • Published Online First 28 January 2008

          Abstract

          Introduction: Referral to colposcopy following a single mildly dyskaryotic smear is becoming more widely recommended in the developed world. This has workload and cost implications.

          Aim: To investigate if stratification of mildly dyskaryotic smears by age group might allow selection of populations that could be followed by repeat cytology initially.

          Methods: The study set was of all women with a diagnosis of dyskaryosis between July 2004 and June 2005 in an opportunistic screening programme. The dyskaryosis was divided into high grade (moderate and severe) and low grade and ratios of high to low grade were calculated for age groups. The age intervals were under 20 years, every five years from 20-54.

          Results: In the study period 34,180 cervical smears were examined. Of these, 2326 women were diagnosed with dyskaryosis, {1566(67%) low-grade, 760(33%) high-grade} in the given age groups. This gave an overall ratio of high-grade to low-grade of 1:2. Ratios of high grade dyskaryosis to low grade dyskaryosis stayed relatively constant throughout the age intervals from 20 -54 years of age, Pearson correlation co-efficient 0.91, p = 0.0014

          Conclusion: The ratios of incidences of grades of dyskaryosis remained constant throughout the age intervals suggesting that selective patterns of referral to colposcopy based on patient's age at diagnosis of mild dyskaryosis are not applicable.

          This Article

          1. All Versions of this Article:
            1. jcp.2007.052308v1
            2. jcp.2007.052308v2
            3. 61/5/665 most recent

          Services

          1. Request permissions

          Responses

          1. Submit a response
          2. No responses published

          Social bookmarking

          Latest from JCP Education

          Latest from JCP Education

          Register for free content


          Free sample
          This recent issue is free to all users to allow everyone the opportunity to see the full scope and typical content of JCP.
          View free sample issue >>

          Free archive
          The full back archive is now available for JCP. Institutional subscribers may access the entire archive as part of their subscription. Personal subscribers will also have access to all content when logged in. Non-subscribers who register have free access to all articles published before 2006, back to volume 1 issue 1.
          Register to access the free archive >>

          Don't forget to sign up for content alerts so you keep up to date with all the articles as they are published.

        1. Latest Pathology jobs

          Latest Pathology jobs