Knowledge and Adherence to SEGO Recommendations for the Prevention of Cervical Cancer by Spanish Gynecologists in Daily Practice

Abstract

Objective: To assess the degree of knowledge of the new recommendations of the Spanish Society of Obstetrics and Gynecology (Sociedad Española de Ginecología y Obstetricia [SEGO]) for the prevention of cervical cancer and vaccination against human papilloma virus (HPV) among Spanish gynecologists and implementation of these recommendations in daily clinical practice. Methods: A cross-sectional survey (from November 2010 to March 2011) was carried out, in which participants used an online platform to complete a questionnaire previously developed by the National Scientific Committee on knowledge of the epidemiology of HPV infection, cervical cancer screening and HPV vaccines, and activities related to these issues in daily clinical practice. Results: A total of 454 gynecologists participated in the study. The gynecologists showed good knowledge of HPV transmission, HPV disease load, mortality due to cervical cancer, demonstration of immune memory, safety and efficiency of HPV vaccines, and the spectrum of protection by the tetravalent vaccine. Knowledge of the rate of sexually-active HPV-positive women at 5 years, differences between the efficacy and efficiency of cytological screening, and safe screening intervals in women with a double negative test (cytology and HPV) was deficient. Proactive attitudes to HPV vaccination in the priority age group (<27 years) was poor, with 63% of the surveyed physicians recommending vaccination. Surprisingly, 4% recommended vaccination in women older than 45 years. Fifteen percent reported they lacked time to explain that cytological testing every 3 years was safe, and 27% considered this practice unsafe. Thirty-five percent reported that the HPV test was unavailable in his/her environment. In 12% of cases, colposcopy was used to complement cytology at the initial visit. Conclusions: Although knowledge of HPV epidemiology and vaccines was adequate, proactive attitudes to HPV vaccination in the preferential age group were scarce. Complete adherence to SEGO recommendations was found in only 38% of participants. Nationwide strategies should be designed and introduced to spread and improve the implementation of these recommendations in daily clinical practice. © 2012 SEGO.

Department(s)

Chemistry

Keywords and Phrases

Cancer of the cervix; Human papillomavirus; Screening; SEGO recommendations

International Standard Serial Number (ISSN)

1578-1453; 0304-5013

Document Type

Article - Journal

Document Version

Citation

File Type

text

Language(s)

English

Rights

© 2024 Elsevier, All rights reserved.

Publication Date

01 Jan 2012

Share

 
COinS