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Significance of a first-time atypical Papanicolaou smear in a young, high-risk African-American and Latino-American population
Authors:GP Parham  M Shaver  P Brown  T Zumwalt  F Salem  EW Savage
Affiliation:Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences, Little Rock 72205.
Abstract:The first atypical Papanicolaou smear in young, sexually active Latino and African-American women of low socioeconomic status may be predictive of underlying cervical neoplasia and human papillomavirus infection of significant quantity. The optimal management of first-time atypia on routine Pap smear has not been established. In many clinics, colposcopically directed sampling of the cervix is recommended only if atypia persists following specific or nonspecific treatment of cervicitis or after an arbitrarily determined time interval. Others recommend immediate colposcopic evaluation. To determine the best approach to the first-time atypical Pap smear in young minority women at high risk for the development of cervical cancer, 250 such patients were evaluated with colposcopically directed biopsy of the cervix prior to any form of therapy. Pap smears were repeated at the time of colposcopy. Histologically, there was evidence of cervical intraepithelial neoplasia in 41% of patients and human papillomavirus infection in 86%. Repeat Pap smears predicted the presence of cervical intraepithelial neoplasia in only 24% of patients. Immediate colposcopic evaluation represents the most prudent approach to the first-time atypical Pap smear in young, high-risk minority women.
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