WASHINGTON -- Getting checked for cervical cancer isn't one-size-fits-all: Millions of women soon may have to decide between a routine Pap or a newer test that detects whether they have a cancer-causing virus.
Draft national guidelines released Tuesday for the first time state either option is reasonable for certain women -- those ages 30 to 65.
Paps, a mainstay for women's health for decades, can spot pre-cancerous abnormalities in time to prevent cancer. Newer HPV tests detect the virus that causes nearly all of that cancer, and while they're widely used to confirm Pap results, most U.S. medical groups haven't pushed them as a stand-alone alternative for screening.
Tuesday's proposal doesn't signal an imminent end to the Pap era. Paps, not HPV tests, still are recommended for screening women in their 20s, stressed the guidelines from the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force.
And don't let the which-test debate blur the main message: "Screening for cervical cancer saves lives," said Task Force member Dr. Carol Mangione of the University of California, Los Angeles.
Today, too many women still miss out. Some things to know:
Cervical cancer has dropped dramatically over the past half-century, thanks to Pap testing. Still, this year an estimated 12,820 U.S. women will be diagnosed with cervical cancer, and about 4,200 will die. Most haven't been screened, or have gone too long between checks.
Paps examine cells scraped from the cervix. HPV testing looks for high-risk strains of the human papillomavirus, the nation's most common sexually transmitted infection. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, just about everyone will get at least one strain at some point in their lives. But only certain strains cause cervical cancer -- and only if they linger long enough in the body.
Otherwise healthy women need a Pap every three years from age 21 to 29, agree most U.S. physician groups and the draft Task Force guidelines. Cervical cancer grows so slowly regular Paps can find a problem early enough to treat.
While the Food and Drug Administration has approved an HPV test for women as young as 25, national guidelines long have recommended Pap screening for 20-somethings. That age group is most likely to get HPV -- and the majority of the time their bodies clear the infection before it harms.
The older you get, the greater the chance an HPV infection is the yearslong, harmful kind. To better catch those cases, today what's called co-testing is increasingly common for women 30 and older -- a Pap-plus-HPV test combination. If the results of both tests are negative, women can wait five years to test again.
But both Paps and HPV testing can trigger false alarms, prompting unneeded, and sometimes harmful, additional care to rule out cancer. New studies show co-testing leads to more false alarms than either test alone, without adding benefit.
That spurred Tuesday's Task Force proposal to let women 30 and older choose an HPV test by itself every five years -- or a Pap every three years instead. The proposal is open for public comment through Oct. 9, before it will be finalized.
Some countries already are moving to make HPV testing the chief screening tool, including the Netherlands and Australia.
"Most experts in this area are in agreement that HPV testing alone is the future of cervical screening," said Debbie Saslow of the American Cancer Society, who wasn't involved with Tuesday's draft guidelines.
Women in their 30s and older need to discuss screening options with their health providers, said Dr. Jason Wright, gynecologic oncology chief at New York-Presbyterian/Columbia University Medical Center, who also wasn't involved with the new guidelines.
An HPV test can cost twice as much as a $40 Pap, but doesn't require screening as often. Some data suggest HPV testing leads to more diagnosis of risky pre-cancer -- but even by itself, an HPV test can spark more false alarms than a Pap, Wright said.
Also, some follow-up tests can alter the cervix in ways that may affect future pregnancies, a consideration for women still interested in childbearing, added the Task Force's Mangione.
It's not recommended for women younger than 21, or those who had a cervix-removing hysterectomy.
Women can stop screening after age 65 if proper checks until then show they're healthy, current guidelines agree.
Keep getting screened, following recommendations for your age. The first HPV vaccine hit the market about 10 years ago, too soon to know whether it's safe for the now-grown first recipients to be screened less often, and newer vaccine versions protect against more strains, said Saslow, the cancer society's senior director of HPV-related and women's cancers.
Eventually, if enough young women grow up fully vaccinated, screening recommendations may change, she said.
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