Nationwide Cervical Precancer Screening In Ghana: Concurrent HPV DNA Testing And Visual Inspection Under An Expanded Hub And-Spoke Mode.
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Scientific Reports
Abstract
Cervical cancer continues to disproportionately burden women in sub-Saharan Africa, and is the
commonest gynecological cancer inGhana.The Cervical Cancer Prevention and Training Centre
(CCPTC), Battor,Ghana spearheaded the Ghana arm of the mPharma 10,000Women Initiative
(mTTWI) between September 2021 and October 2022. The aim of this study was to examine the
outcomes of nationwide concurrent screening using high-risk human papillomavirus (hr-HPV) DNA
testing and visual inspection methods, as well as factors associated with the screening outcomes.
We conducted a descriptive retrospective cross-sectional study to estimate the prevalence of hr-HPV
infection (nationally and regionally) and cervical lesions among women screened by graduates of our
training center in their own settings (spokes) with remote supervision and mentoring by CCPTC trainers
(hub). We modelled factors associated with hr-HPV infection using nominal logistic regression. Among
5217 women screened (mean age, 40.1 years), the overall prevalence of hr-HPV infection and cervical
lesions were 29.1% (95% confidence interval [CI] 27.9–30.3) and 3.7% (95% CI 3.2–4.2), respectively.
The prevalence distribution varied widely among regions, with the highest recorded in the Oti Region
(32.8%) and the lowest recorded in the UpperWest (20.7%) and North-East (20.7%) regions.The
most frequently detected HPV genotype was other hr-HPV type(s) only (non-HPV16, non-HPV18)
(23.5%; 95% CI 22.3–24.7), followed by HPV16 only (1.5%; 95% CI 1.2–1.8), and mixed infection with
HPV18+other hr-HPV type(s) (1.2%; 95% CI 0.9–1.5). Factors found to be significantly associated with
hr-HPV infection among women screened included age<35 years, having a relationship status apart
from married/cohabitation, nulliparity, and HIV positivity. Drawing from our implementation of this
model within the mTTWI, we posit that while Ghana prepares for organized screening, coordinating
opportunistic screening could enable a phased expansion of cervical precancer screening with the help
of international and local partners.This approach, combined with concurrent testing (hr-HPV DNA
testing and visual inspection), holds promise for mitigating loss to follow-up among women requiring
additional evaluation and lesion management.
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Research Article
Citation
Effah, K., Allotey, J., Tekpor, E., Wormenor, C. M., Amuah, J. E., Antwi-Boasiako, E., ... & Akakpo, P. K. (2025). Nationwide cervical precancer screening in Ghana: concurrent HPV DNA testing and visual inspection under an expanded hub-and-spoke model. Scientific Reports, 15(1), 1744.
