Business Standard

Pocket colposcope: New hope for teeming cervical cancer population

- GINA KRISHNAN

Cervical cancer is preventabl­e, but more women in India die from it than in any other country. According to the National Institute of Cancer Prevention and Research (NICPR), at least 96,322 new cervical cancer cases are detected and 60,078 deaths are reported every year. Experts believe the numbers could be many times over, as cancer screening and detection is abysmally low in India and developing countries.

Dr Nimmi Ramanujan, professor of biomedical engineerin­g at Duke University, directs the Global Women's health Technologi­es at the Pratt School of Engineerin­g and Duke Global Health Institute. Recently, she was in India to talk about a technology she has developed called the pocket colposcope, and to dwell on an ongoing study being conducted in India in partnershi­p with noted gynecologi­c oncologist, Dr Neerja Bhatla of the All-India Institute of Medical Sciences (AIIMS).

The inspiratio­n for the pocket colposcope, a new screening device that is gaining acceptance, resulted from a visit to Moshi, Tanzania. The director of the Kilimanjar­o Christian Medical Center reproducti­ve screening clinic pointed out that one of biggest barriers to cervical cancer screening is the use of speculum. Women who enter the screening cascade for the first time are usually not familiar with this procedure and are intimidate­d by the idea of having a cold metal object inside their bodies. This barrier was ultimately what led to the conceptual­isation of the pocket colposcope.

How the pocket colposcope works. What is fundamenta­lly different about the pocket colposcope, compared to a standard clinical colposcope is that rather than looking at the cervix from outside the body, through the speculum, the pocket colposcope can be inserted through the speculum to provide a close-up view of the cervix to take a picture. When the colposcope is close to the cervix, the quality of pictures obtained rival that of the best colposcope­s on the market, but at a fraction of the cost and size (a fifth or a tenth, depending on the kind of colposcope you buy). There are two versions of the pocket colposcope - one with a 5-mega pixel camera that can be used to obtain images via insertion through a speculum and one with a 2-mega pixel camera that is more slender and can be inserted into a tampon-like introducer called the Calla scope, to enable speculum-free visualisat­ion of the cervix.

Historical­ly, the colposcope has not been the gold standard for screening of cervical cancer; rather it guides biopsy following a positive pap smear screen. It is used to visualise lesions, which are then biopsied and evaluated by a pathologis­t to confirm disease prior to treatment. That being said, in low resource communitie­s, there is not sufficient funding or infrastruc­ture to perform pap smears, buy colposcope­s, or process biopsies. So in those communitie­s, providers often visualise the cervix with the naked eye or a camera, and use their experience to determine whether a patient needs treatment or not.

In this instance, having a device like a colposcope is particular­ly important, as a highqualit­y image provides the basis for a more accurate interpreta­tion in the absence of a biopsy. The digital images can be processed with automated decision-making algorithms, making effective point-of-care colposcopy and diagnosis possible in the hands of community health providers.

In a high-income setting, it can be used as a standard colposcope during a procedure in a hospital or a specialty clinic, bringing affordable screening to more providers. It is very intuitive to use, like a digital camera and, typically, a onehour training over skype on the use of the technology is sufficient for providers to independen­tly use the device on patients. The ultimate goal is to bring this technology to the community health setting so it can be used to triage patients at the sites where they live, before referring them to a hospital. Currently, a session which involves screening using a colposcope costs ~35,000. Says Dr Sabhyata Gupta, Director, Gynaecolog­y and Onco Gynaecolog­y, "The pocket colposcope will be an excellent device to use as the current product is bulky."

The pocket colposcope is easy to use and needs minimal maintenanc­e. In the US, it has been priced at $1,000. Pricing for the developing world is still being worked on, as access was the raison d'être for developing the product. Duke is in discussion­s with potential partners for scale up in India.

 ??  ?? Historical­ly, the colposcope has not been the gold standard for screening of cervical cancer; rather it guides biopsy following a positive pap smear screen
Historical­ly, the colposcope has not been the gold standard for screening of cervical cancer; rather it guides biopsy following a positive pap smear screen

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