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Polish Journal of Pathology
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3/2021
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Original paper

Why are Polish women diagnosed with invasive cervical cancer after negative cytology in the organized screening programme – a pilot reevaluation of negative Pap smears preceding diagnoses of interval cancers

Katarzyna Komerska
1
,
Anna Macios
1
,
Patrycja Glińska
2
,
Włodzimierz Olszewski
3
,
Joanna Didkowska
4
,
Urszula Wojciechowska
4
,
Michał F. Kamiński
1
,
Andrzej Nowakowski
1

  1. Department of Cancer Prevention, Maria Sklodowska-Curie National Research Institute of Oncology, Warsaw, Poland
  2. Warsaw PhD School in Natural and BioMedical Sciences, Maria Sklodowska-Curie National Research Institute of Oncology in Warsaw, Poland
  3. Department of Pathology and Laboratory Diagnostics, Maria Sklodowska-Curie National Research Institute of Oncology in Warsaw, Poland
  4. Polish National Cancer Registry, Maria Sklodowska-Curie National Research Institute of Oncology in Warsaw, Poland
Pol J Pathol 2021; 72 (3): 261-266
Online publish date: 2022/01/20
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Introduction

In 2018 cervical cancer (CC) was the fourth most frequently diagnosed malignancy and the fourth leading cause of cancer death worldwide among females [1]. In 2017 in Poland there were 2502 new cases and 1609 deaths due to CC which ranks it 8th as the most frequent female cancer and the 9th cancer-related reason of death in females [2]. Invasive CC are preceded by many years by preinvasive intraepithelial lesions which may be identified in screening and effectively treated. This may lead to major decline in both cancer incidence and mortality. Well-organized screening programmes can contribute to 80% decline in CC incidence [3]. However this may be achieved only in countries with very high quality at every step of the screening programme which limits incidence of interval cancers – namely those which are diagnosed after false-negative screening tests before the next or after the last round of screening. Audit of interval cancers and deep insight into the reasons of false-negative screening tests results are a very important and integral part of quality assurance in screening programmes according to European guidelines for quality assurance in cervical cancer screening [4]. .
Organised Cervical Cancer Screening Programme (OCCSP) was implemented in Poland in 2006 [5]. Under the Programme, each insured Polish woman aged 25 to 59 is eligible for free of charge Pap smear test every 3 years, which is in accordance with the European guidelines [4]. Triage algorithm for abnormal smears is based on Recommendations of the Polish Gynecological Society and include repeated cytology in 6 months and colposcopy/colpscopcially directed biopsy depending on the severity of cytological abnormalities [6]. If screening cytology is negative, rescreening is scheduled after 3 years. Medical records of procedures performed in the OCCSP are stored in the central electronic database called SIMP (Polish: System Informatyczny Monitorowania Profilaktyki). It collects information and enables analysis of results of screening tests. The SIMP is partially linked with the treatment databases of the National Health Fund and allows selection of patients who are eligible for screening. Every diagnoses of invasive cancer in Poland is required by law to be reported to the Polish National Cancer Registry (PNCR). .
Central Coordination Centre (Polish: COK – Centralny Oœrodek Koordynuj¹cy) within the Department of Cancer Prevention, Maria Sklodowska-Curie National Research Institute of Oncology, Warsaw, Poland, based on a contract with the Ministry of Health has, among others, the task to monitor quality of services in screening programmes run nationally in the country. These activities were limited mainly to on-site visits since the roll-out of the OCCSP but were gradually developed after 2017 into a more complete set of quality assurance activities. An audit of interval CC have never been performed and false-negative slides have never been reviewed in Poland before. .
Therefore the aim of this pilot study was to get insight into the reasons for obtaining false-negative results of Pap tests preceding diagnosis of interval CC as an integral part of quality assurance process in the Polish OCCSP.

Material and methods

In 2018 COK retrieved data from SIMP on all Pap smears collected in the OCCSP in 2010-2015. There were 1 599 434 Pap smears collected in 2010 (795 992) and 2011 (803 442) within the OCCSP. Each of 1 575 662 women participating in the OCCSP, identified by her personal identification number, was attributed to her last slide. Slides were evaluated according to Bethesda 2001 terminology. .
Data from SIMP concerning smears taken in 2010-2011 were then linked by personal identification number with data obtained from the PNCR on invasive cancers and their histology based on International Classification of Diseases for Oncology (ICD-O-3) coding collected by the PNCR. .
False-negative Pap test results were defined as those assessed as No Intraepithelial Lesion of Malignancy (NILM) according to the Bethesda system in women diagnosed with invasive CC and recorded in the PNCR within 42 months since Pap test sampling. .
For each false-negative Pap test random two slides collected in 2010-2015 were selected from the same laboratory. Blinded review of false-negative slides seeded among those randomly selected (in accordance with European guidelines for quality assurance in cervical cancer screening [4] stating that slides should be re-screened alongside negative and/or positive controls and the labels concealed) was performed independently by three cytomorphologists, each one with more than 20 years of experience in Pap test evaluation – among them two pathomorphologists, from one laboratory. Cytomorphologists were aware that false-negative slides were mixed among other slides, but had no knowledge about the number of them. .
Due to lack of data we cannot state whether these interval cancers were detected by a subsequent screening test (in opportunistic screening before the end of interval) or were they symptomatic.

Statistical analysis

Diagnosis made by each expert was categorized into four categories based on the Bethesda system (TBS): .
• NILM, .
• unsatisfactory for evaluation, .
• low-grade abnormalities: atypical squamous cells of undetermined significance (ASC-US), low-grade squamous intraepithelial lesion (LSIL), .
• high-grade abnormalities: atypical squamous cells, cannot exclude HSIL (ASC-H), high-grade squamous intraepithelial lesion (HSIL), atypical glandular cells (AGC)/adenocarcinoma (ADC), squamous cell carcinoma (SCC). .
If there was no agreement between all three experts slide was put in a category “No agreement”. .
We have selected this very strict way of reaching a final diagnosis and coding of cases for statistical analysis to reassure that only slides assessed by all three experts as satisfactory for evaluation and NILM should trigger retesting at a standard interval or end of screening (for women aged 59 years). .
Fleiss’ κ was calculated as an index of all three observers agreement. Significance level of 0.05 was established. Values of κ coefficient was interpreted according to Landis and Koch [7] as: <0 – poor; 0.0-0.2 – slight; 0.2-0.4 – fair; 0.4-0.6 – moderate; 0.6-0.8 – substantial and 0.8-1.0 – almost perfect agreement.

Results

We obtained 379 records of interval CC in 2010-2011, including 374 with histopathological confirmation by ICD-O-3 codes. Altogether for our pilot study we managed to collect 142 Pap smears taken in 2010-2015 from three laboratories based in Silesian Voivodship (141 with negative result, 1 with positive result), including 48 cases with histopathological confirmation of CC within 42 months after the negative result. Some of the selected smears were utilised or damaged and excluded from the study, but we managed to obtain the final proportion of false-negative smears to those randomly selected close to 1:2.

Review of 48 false-negative slides

Among 48 women with false-negative Pap tests results obtained in 2010-2011 selected for this pilot analysis, 35 were diagnosed with invasive squamous cell carcinomas, 12 had confirmed adenocarcinomas and 1 was confirmed as carcinosarcoma. Every Pap sample was a conventional cytology slide. The unweighted Cohen’s κ value for pathomorphologists (0.508) was lower than between any other pair of experts (0.713 and 0.557), so we concluded that in this study the position of the reviewer was not relevant to the level of agreement. .
Diagnosis was established when three experts agreed on a result. Results of slide review by three experts with histopathological results are presented in Table I. There were 31 diagnoses altogether (64.6% of all slides). Of 48 smears all three experts diagnosed 1 case as a low-grade abnormality (2.1%), 22 (45.8%) cases as high-grade abnormalities, 3 (6.3%) cases as unsatisfactory for evaluation and 5 (10.4%) as NILM (Table I). There was no agreement in 17 (35.4%) cases. .
Of 12 smears taken before adenocarcinoma confirmation, 4 was re-classified by experts as high-grade abnormalities, 1 as low-grade abnormalities, 2 as a NILM and 1 as unsatisfactory for evaluation. There was no agreement between experts on 4 cases. .
All three experts diagnosed unanimously 26 (54.2%) cases as abnormal. .
The interobserver agreement by percentages was 64.6. Fleiss’ κ coefficient was 0.593 for three experts.

Review of control slides

Among 94 control smears that we selected for this pilot analysis, 93 were previously diagnosed as NILM and 1 as LSIL. .
There were 49 diagnoses established (three experts’ agreement, 52.1% of all control smears). There were 5 diagnoses of low-grade abnormalities (5.3%), 8 (8.5%) cases diagnosed as a high-grade abnormalities, 7 (7.4 %) cases as unsatisfactory for evaluation and 29 (30.9%) as NILM (Table II). There was no agreement in 45 (47.9%) cases. Without the distinction between low-grade and high-grade abnormalities, the experts classified 22 (23.4%) smears as abnormal. .
The interobserver agreement by percentages was 52.3. Fleiss’ κ coefficient was 0.500 for three experts.

Discussion

Exfoliative cytology, although enabled implementation of mass screening for cervical neoplasia in developed countries as a fairly simple, inexpensive and non-invasive method, is not a perfect screening test. As a subjective method relying on visual, microscopic interpretation of cells by human eye, it has limited sensitivity and moderate reproducibility and accuracy [8, 9, 10]. According to the literature, interpretation of cytological specimens is dependent on the experience, skills and time spent on examination of the smear by the screener and a consequence of this is inter- and intra-observer variation [4]. Interobserver agreement of three experts in our study was moderate. Previous studies showed similar results in cervical cytology [8, 11, 12]. .
Most common reasons why false-negative reports may be generated are: inadequate sampling, handling or staining of the sample, misinterpretation of a positive smear containing abnormal cells as a negative slide [13, 14, 15, 16]. A false-negative “normal” cytology imposes no indication for colposcopy and return for screening after an interval or exit from screening for oldest screening cohorts, so diagnosis and treatment are delayed and prognosis may worsen because invasive cancers may be diagnosed at symptomatic, advanced stages. .
To maximally limit the false-negative reports, organised cytology-based screening programmes require extensive quality assurance measures. Audit of interval cancers is an important part of these activities [4]. .
In our pilot study we have for the first time identified major reasons for obtaining a negative result of screening cytology preceding diagnosis of interval CC in the Polish OCCSP as a part of quality assurance process. Over 60% of Pap smears initially classified as NILM preceding diagnosis of invasive CC were re-classified as abnormal/unsatisfactory for evaluation by expert review (including 45.8% of them evaluated as high-grade abnormalities), 10.4% initially negative slides in routing screening practice were assessed as satisfactory for evaluation and graded normal (NILM) by expert review. Moderate agreement (Fleiss’ Κ 0.593) was noted between 3 independent expert cytologists on blinded reassessment of false-negative Pap smears. In 35.4% of slides the expert review was discordant. On the grounds of our pilot results we may point at interpretation/assessment errors as the main causes of false-negative cytology results in the Polish OCCSP. The results of review of control slides seems to uphold that conclusion – three experts independently agreed on finding high-grade abnormalities in 8.5% and low-grade abnormalities in 5.3% of control slides. .
Our experts’ review results that re-classify 54.2% smears as positives, are consistent with those of Kenter et al. reporting 53% of negative smears sampled 3.5 years before the diagnosis of squamous cell carcinoma re-classified as positive [17]. In audit performed in Denmark 9.8% of the 112 women diagnosed with a cervical malignancy were found to have false-negative cytological samples (defined as “normal” cytological sample prior to cancer diagnosis with post-audit diagnosis of HSIL or worse) [18]. DeMay reports in his study 51.9% of slides reclassified from “normal” to “abnormal” (of 655 reported smears) [19]. .
Many solutions to limit the rate of assessment errors have been proposed and implemented worldwide such as lab and personnel certification/recertification, continuous educations and training programs, rapid or two-stage reassessment of all or randomly selected slides [4]. Initiatives have been undertaken in Poland to implement new or intensify some of these measures which are already in place. Also rescreening is mandatory in the OCCSP in Poland and rapid rescreening of 10% of slides is dominating. .
Quality of the smear is an important component of assessment of the Pap sample according to TBS (2001 or revisioned 2014) [20]. There are various determinants of “unsatisfactory for evaluation” quality of conventional Pap smears such as inadequate cellularity, obscuring blood, obscuring inflammation [21, 22]. Some of them may be attributed to sampling errors [19, 23]. Sample assessed as unsatisfactory for evaluation should be retaken promptly. In our pilot study 6.3% of false-negative smears initially assessed as satisfactory for evaluation were reassessed as unsatisfactory for evaluation by all three experts. In 2008, of all smears taken within the OCCSP 0.9% were unsatisfactory [24], in 2018 and 2019 according to SIMP there were respectively 0.6% and 0.7% unsatisfactory smears. In studies conducted in the United States, Netherlands or Italy the percentage of unsatisfactory smears was between 1.11 and 1.4 [25, 26]. The rate of unsatisfactory conventional cervical cytology is considerably lower in the Polish OCCSP. Our results indicate that more attention should be paid to the quality of the smear by Polish cytomorphologists and the rate of “unsatisfactory for evaluation” should be higher which should limit the unsatisfactory quality of the smear as the reason for obtaining false negative Paps. .
In our pilot study minority of false-negative Pap smears (10.4%) was related to true lack of abnormal cells on the slides and were reassessed normal by three experts blinded to the original diagnosis. There may be two causes of this phenomenon: 1) sampling errors or 2) the nature of the lesion which does not allow for proper collection of abnormal cells such as its submucosal location deep in the glands covered by normal epithelium or endocervical localisation. The first is potentially addressed by further training of gynaecologists and midwives to improve sampling quality. The second may be potentially limited by implementation of more sensitive screening tools such as molecular HPV testing. .
In our study close to 20% of interval CC cancers were adenocarcinomas and this rate is over twice as high as the proportion of this histotype among all diagnosed CCs in Poland. These findings are consistent with many other studies indicating lower sensitivity of cytology in detecting glandular neoplasia than most common squamous cell lesions [27, 28]. In extensively screened populations this may be responsible for a relative increase in adenocarcinoma incidence among all cervical cancer in recent years [29, 30]. .
We are aware of the limitations of our pilot analysis. A relatively small number of slides was reassessed and majority of them (64.6%) was retrieved from just one laboratory for logistic reasons and accessibility. However, we have already initiated revision of all false-negative slides from all laboratories in Poland beginning from 2010 up to most recent times to obtain a full picture of reasons for false-negative reports of cytology results preceding interval cancers in the Polish OCCSP. We have also already used the most difficult and controversial slides as the educational material during organized courses for cytomorphologists. Also, our 3 experts came from one laboratory which could have influence review. At present the review of all accessible false-negative slides is performed by 3 most experienced experts in gynaecological cytology in Poland with more than 30 years of experience, the title of Professor of medicine and extensive background as researchers and trainers. These actions in the framework of quality assessment and assurance should result in more effective CC screening in the country, even after possible changes within the OCCSP i.e. transition to primary HPV-based screening with reflex Liquid Based Cytology incorporated into triage protocols.

Conclusions

In our pilot analysis interpretation errors followed by true absence of abnormal cells on the slides are responsible for false-negative Pap smear results preceding diagnosis of interval CC in the Polish OCCSP. Our pilot results initiated full, comprehensive review of all false-negative slides and further development of quality assurance in the screening program in our country.
.
The authors declare no conflict of interest.

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Copyright: © 2022 Polish Association of Pathologists and the Polish Branch of the International Academy of Pathology This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0) License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/), allowing third parties to copy and redistribute the material in any medium or format and to remix, transform, and build upon the material, provided the original work is properly cited and states its license.
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