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Cervical Cancer Screening Assessment in Romania- Problems, Present, Future Iuliana Apostol, MD Dr Victor Babes Foundation, Bucharest, Romania
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Cervical Cancer Screening Assessment in Romania- Problems, Present, Future Iuliana Apostol, MD Dr Victor Babes Foundation, Bucharest, Romania.

Dec 18, 2015

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Page 1: Cervical Cancer Screening Assessment in Romania- Problems, Present, Future Iuliana Apostol, MD Dr Victor Babes Foundation, Bucharest, Romania.

Cervical Cancer Screening Assessment in Romania-Problems, Present, Future

Iuliana Apostol, MDDr Victor Babes Foundation, Bucharest, Romania

Page 2: Cervical Cancer Screening Assessment in Romania- Problems, Present, Future Iuliana Apostol, MD Dr Victor Babes Foundation, Bucharest, Romania.

Epidemiological Data

Page 3: Cervical Cancer Screening Assessment in Romania- Problems, Present, Future Iuliana Apostol, MD Dr Victor Babes Foundation, Bucharest, Romania.

Epidemiological Data

Page 4: Cervical Cancer Screening Assessment in Romania- Problems, Present, Future Iuliana Apostol, MD Dr Victor Babes Foundation, Bucharest, Romania.

National Epidemiological DataSource: CCSS

Age-specific rates of the incidence of cervical cancer in females in Romania over the period 1998 - 2003

0.00

10.00

20.00

30.00

40.00

50.00

60.00

70.00

80.00

90.00

100.00

Age-group

Ag

e-s

pe

cif

ic r

ate

s

1999

2000

2001

2002

2003

Page 5: Cervical Cancer Screening Assessment in Romania- Problems, Present, Future Iuliana Apostol, MD Dr Victor Babes Foundation, Bucharest, Romania.

National Epidemiological DataSource: CCSS

Crude and age-standardised rates of the incidence of cervical cancer in Romania

0.00

5.00

10.00

15.00

20.00

25.00

30.00

35.00

1999 2000 2001 2002 2003

CR

ASR

Page 6: Cervical Cancer Screening Assessment in Romania- Problems, Present, Future Iuliana Apostol, MD Dr Victor Babes Foundation, Bucharest, Romania.

National Epidemiological DataSource: CCSS

Age-specific rates of the mortality of cervical cancer in females in Romania over the period

1999 - 2003

0.00

5.00

10.00

15.00

20.00

25.00

30.00

35.00

40.00

45.00

50.00

Age-group

Rate

s

1999

2000

2001

2002

2003

Page 7: Cervical Cancer Screening Assessment in Romania- Problems, Present, Future Iuliana Apostol, MD Dr Victor Babes Foundation, Bucharest, Romania.

National Epidemiological DataSource: CCSS

Crude and age-standardised rates of the mortality of cervical cancer in Romania

0.002.00

4.006.008.00

10.0012.0014.00

16.0018.00

1999 2000 2001 2002 2003

ASR

CR

Page 8: Cervical Cancer Screening Assessment in Romania- Problems, Present, Future Iuliana Apostol, MD Dr Victor Babes Foundation, Bucharest, Romania.

Why These Epidemiological Figures ?

Romanian Statistic Annual 2004: Cervical cancer incidence =33,88:100.000 women Cervical cancer mortality =16,38:100.000 women The highest rates (first place) in Europe regarding

specific mortality (CC) 1981-The Commission of Oncology from the Health

Ministry; 1981-1985 the first preventive cancer strategy. 1986-1990,1991-1995, 1996-2000: successive

preventive cancer strategies, but not finalized (bad management, frequent changes in high-level management, inconstant financing).

Page 9: Cervical Cancer Screening Assessment in Romania- Problems, Present, Future Iuliana Apostol, MD Dr Victor Babes Foundation, Bucharest, Romania.

PAST IN ROMANIA

Page 10: Cervical Cancer Screening Assessment in Romania- Problems, Present, Future Iuliana Apostol, MD Dr Victor Babes Foundation, Bucharest, Romania.

Organized Screening

1998-2000 the first pilot study in Cluj district - run by IOCN.

2001-2002 the second pilot study for cervical cancer in Bucharest (3 out of 6 areas) and neighboring rural areas - run by CPSS.

2002-2004 a screening program for cervical cancer in Cluj district - run by IOCN.

Page 11: Cervical Cancer Screening Assessment in Romania- Problems, Present, Future Iuliana Apostol, MD Dr Victor Babes Foundation, Bucharest, Romania.

1998-2002 The Pilot Studies

First pilot study - in Cluj district: planning and implementing an organized CC prevention program; it demonstrated the efficiency of primary medicine in CC prevention.

Second pilot study - in Bucharest and neighboring rural areas: an estimated 40.000 women PAP tested; developing guidelines for GPs and other specialists, I & E campaigns, screening activities and organizing reference centers.

Page 12: Cervical Cancer Screening Assessment in Romania- Problems, Present, Future Iuliana Apostol, MD Dr Victor Babes Foundation, Bucharest, Romania.

The Best Screening: 2002-2004

Women aged 25-65, screened with PAP test at three year interval, in Cluj district.

Results: Built up the screening network at the primary

medicine level; GPs – key providers in the network. Elaborated the methodology and quality standards for

the screening program. Organized a reference cytology laboratory (with 45.000

pap smears). Set up a regional registry for cervical cytology (a

computerized informational system).

Page 13: Cervical Cancer Screening Assessment in Romania- Problems, Present, Future Iuliana Apostol, MD Dr Victor Babes Foundation, Bucharest, Romania.

PRESENT IN ROMANIA

Page 14: Cervical Cancer Screening Assessment in Romania- Problems, Present, Future Iuliana Apostol, MD Dr Victor Babes Foundation, Bucharest, Romania.

Screening at present time

2005-2006 opportunistic screening for CC, through the national subprogram of the Health Ministry. The subprogram 2.2: “Prevention and Control in Oncology”.

2005-2006 a regionally organized screening for CC, through another project: “A model for early detection of genital-urinary cancer”. It has been financed by JSI Research & Training Institute, USA.

Page 15: Cervical Cancer Screening Assessment in Romania- Problems, Present, Future Iuliana Apostol, MD Dr Victor Babes Foundation, Bucharest, Romania.

The National Oncology Subprogram

Objective: early detection (stages 0, I, II) of cervical cancer cases. The monitoring of the program is done through the two national institutes: IOB and IOCN.

Physical indicators: number of screening tests =32.400.

Efficiency indicators =medium cost/screening test =10 Euro.

Result indicators: cancer mortality target-decrease under 197/100.000; proportion of early detection through screening-increase by 3%.

Page 16: Cervical Cancer Screening Assessment in Romania- Problems, Present, Future Iuliana Apostol, MD Dr Victor Babes Foundation, Bucharest, Romania.

A Regionally Organized Screening

The target group: 3.500 women from rural areas, aged 25-65, from 4 districts and Cluj city.

The objectives: increase the accessibility of women from rural areas to the preventive strategies and increase awareness of the importance of this examination (I & E campaign).

Page 17: Cervical Cancer Screening Assessment in Romania- Problems, Present, Future Iuliana Apostol, MD Dr Victor Babes Foundation, Bucharest, Romania.

COMPONENT 1- Community Information and Education

Page 18: Cervical Cancer Screening Assessment in Romania- Problems, Present, Future Iuliana Apostol, MD Dr Victor Babes Foundation, Bucharest, Romania.

I & E Activities in the Community

There are only regional campaigns of I &E regarding CCP in Romania, limited in time and most focusing on urban areas; there is only one regional project with rural focus, regarding the importance of CCP.

A national survey study -”Reproductive Health Survey in Romania in 2004” - indicated a low impact of I & E campaigns.

Page 19: Cervical Cancer Screening Assessment in Romania- Problems, Present, Future Iuliana Apostol, MD Dr Victor Babes Foundation, Bucharest, Romania.

I & E Activities in the Community

Attitudes regarding own health: 80% of sexually active women have never been tested with PAP smear and 37% never heard of it.

Women that never heard about PAP smear: low educational level (62%), low socio-economic status (60%), women with three or more children (56%), younger women (53% between 15-24 years), rural women.

Source: Final report of Reproductive Health Survey in Romania 2004, a national study.

Page 20: Cervical Cancer Screening Assessment in Romania- Problems, Present, Future Iuliana Apostol, MD Dr Victor Babes Foundation, Bucharest, Romania.

I & E Activities in the Community

Success of this component requires good selection of important stakeholders, experienced in training of formulators and involving them into the new CCP. Broadcasting information through the mass media, combined with personal invitation to the screening are the single most important means of attaining high coverage.

The new program needs designing and large dissemination of informative materials, adapted to the target population, in order to increase the impact of I&E campaigns.

Page 21: Cervical Cancer Screening Assessment in Romania- Problems, Present, Future Iuliana Apostol, MD Dr Victor Babes Foundation, Bucharest, Romania.

INVITATION LEAFLET & POSTER

Page 22: Cervical Cancer Screening Assessment in Romania- Problems, Present, Future Iuliana Apostol, MD Dr Victor Babes Foundation, Bucharest, Romania.

PAPER ADD

Page 23: Cervical Cancer Screening Assessment in Romania- Problems, Present, Future Iuliana Apostol, MD Dr Victor Babes Foundation, Bucharest, Romania.

COMPONENT 2- Screening Services

Page 24: Cervical Cancer Screening Assessment in Romania- Problems, Present, Future Iuliana Apostol, MD Dr Victor Babes Foundation, Bucharest, Romania.

Screening Services - policy

Some changes in health policy are needed: Organizing a GP centered program. Setting up a unique cervical cancer screening

guide, adapted to the international standards. Setting up the desired covering and the frequency

of screening test. Reducing ambiguous policies and incompatibilities

between Health Ministry (organization and service providing) and CNAS (financing) regarding CCP.

Page 25: Cervical Cancer Screening Assessment in Romania- Problems, Present, Future Iuliana Apostol, MD Dr Victor Babes Foundation, Bucharest, Romania.

Screening Services – Role of GPs

GPs activities inside the screening services are: cartography, active recruitment, screening tests, patient files & reports, communication of test results.

The best covering can be obtained only through active intervention of GPs in the patients recruitment process for the screening.

The program needs some financial incentive for GPs.

Page 26: Cervical Cancer Screening Assessment in Romania- Problems, Present, Future Iuliana Apostol, MD Dr Victor Babes Foundation, Bucharest, Romania.

Screening Services - Limitations

Currently no active recruitment of eligible women takes place; the process needs to involve GPs as key providers of services and also better media dissemination.

There is no unique PAP smear processing and interpretation in Romania.

There is no unique model for registration of data in screening process at national level.

There are not enough GPs properly trained for CCP; a tremendous need for specific training.

Page 27: Cervical Cancer Screening Assessment in Romania- Problems, Present, Future Iuliana Apostol, MD Dr Victor Babes Foundation, Bucharest, Romania.

Screening Services - Limitations

There are few resources in a GP’s office, imposing an important financial limitation to high attendance.

There are no monitoring and evaluation indicators for the screening services; mandatory: constant evaluation of the proportion of dysplasia or cancer

detected, false positive and false negative readings. European Guidelines for Quality Control in Cervix

Cancer Screening must be implemented.

Page 28: Cervical Cancer Screening Assessment in Romania- Problems, Present, Future Iuliana Apostol, MD Dr Victor Babes Foundation, Bucharest, Romania.

Screening Services - Covering

16.41811.8

05

101520253035404550

1993 1999 2004

Source: Final report of Reproductive Health Survey in Romania 2004- proportion of women with the PAP smear in the last 3 years

Page 29: Cervical Cancer Screening Assessment in Romania- Problems, Present, Future Iuliana Apostol, MD Dr Victor Babes Foundation, Bucharest, Romania.

Screening Services-publications

IOB & IOCN Institutes are the leaders in the design of clinical national guidelines in CC screening.

The existing guidelines need continuous updating. It is necessary to use the latest version of

international guidelines in CC screening in order to have only one national model for collecting, storing, transportation and interpretation of PAP smears (e.g. implementation the Bethesda system).

Page 30: Cervical Cancer Screening Assessment in Romania- Problems, Present, Future Iuliana Apostol, MD Dr Victor Babes Foundation, Bucharest, Romania.

PUBLICATIONS CPSS : CD-ROM & VIDEO RECORDING

Page 31: Cervical Cancer Screening Assessment in Romania- Problems, Present, Future Iuliana Apostol, MD Dr Victor Babes Foundation, Bucharest, Romania.

PUBLICATIONS CPSS-CERVICAL CANCER SCREENING GUIDELINE

Page 32: Cervical Cancer Screening Assessment in Romania- Problems, Present, Future Iuliana Apostol, MD Dr Victor Babes Foundation, Bucharest, Romania.

PUBLICATIONS-IOCN

Page 33: Cervical Cancer Screening Assessment in Romania- Problems, Present, Future Iuliana Apostol, MD Dr Victor Babes Foundation, Bucharest, Romania.

Screening Services - burden for GPs

1 GP has 1.700 patients, of which approximately 600 women targeted (33%) who need to be tested each year.

Testing of all 600 women in a year necessitates roughly 2 hours/daily X 2 times weekly of GP’s working time, considering a screening test of 15 min/test.

Source: Cervical cancer screening: from theory to practice, national Conference of Family Practice, Calimanesti, Oct 2002; Teresa Franciuk, C. I. Chirciu.

Page 34: Cervical Cancer Screening Assessment in Romania- Problems, Present, Future Iuliana Apostol, MD Dr Victor Babes Foundation, Bucharest, Romania.

COMPONENT 3- Diagnosis And/ or Treatment Services

Page 35: Cervical Cancer Screening Assessment in Romania- Problems, Present, Future Iuliana Apostol, MD Dr Victor Babes Foundation, Bucharest, Romania.

Diagnosis and/or Treatment Services

Not sufficient linkage between GPs and diagnostic and histopathology laboratories; no adequate reference & feedback .

Not enough information about the reference centers in CCP, no databases.

No generally accepted monitoring and evaluation indicators for these services.

No qualitative guidelines for the services provided and a need for continuous training for pathologists and gynecologists.

Page 36: Cervical Cancer Screening Assessment in Romania- Problems, Present, Future Iuliana Apostol, MD Dr Victor Babes Foundation, Bucharest, Romania.

Conclusions –things to do

Obtain policy agreement from central authorities and implement policy changes.

Contact central institutions (MoH, CNAS, INS) and also territorial institutions (DJSP, CJAS, IJS) to promote the program.

DJSP contact GPs from territory, managers of cytology laboratories and diagnostic & treatment centers (gynecology, oncology, histopathology laboratories).

Page 37: Cervical Cancer Screening Assessment in Romania- Problems, Present, Future Iuliana Apostol, MD Dr Victor Babes Foundation, Bucharest, Romania.

Conclusions - things to do (cont’d)

MoH: validate the updated clinical guidelines for CCP program; organize the training plan for GPs & specialists; set up a guide for quality control and accreditation of laboratories/centers, which participate into the CCP program.

DJSP: disseminate the guide for CCP to GPs & specialists; plan the educational sessions for GPs and specialists; evaluate the quality of services provided in territory.

CNAS estimates the necessary equipment, materials and also incentives for GPs involved in screening; CJAS verifies the costs associated with CCP program.

Page 38: Cervical Cancer Screening Assessment in Romania- Problems, Present, Future Iuliana Apostol, MD Dr Victor Babes Foundation, Bucharest, Romania.

Conclusions - things to do (cont’d)

Set up & analyze system indicators: for infrastructure - databases with GPs office, cytology labs, diagnosis and treatment centers; economic-estimates of the consumables and costs; outcome measure -% of reducing invasive cancer.

Set up & analyze human resources indicators: number of GPs/ specialists trained, number of I&E campaigns, quantity & type of informative materials.

Set up & analyze target group indicators: number of eligible persons, coverage, number of screening tests, number of FP or FN tests, number of TP tests (cases of dysplasia/cancer identified).

Page 39: Cervical Cancer Screening Assessment in Romania- Problems, Present, Future Iuliana Apostol, MD Dr Victor Babes Foundation, Bucharest, Romania.

THANK YOU