Irish Independent

Women who face cervical retest to be prioritise­d

- Eilish O’Regan HEALTH CORRESPOND­ENT

THE 4,300 women who are being offered retests by CervicalCh­eck arising out of revelation­s on HPV screening in one of its labs will get their results in four weeks.

The women were contacted after it emerged Quest Diagnostic­s, the United Statesbase­d laboratory carrying out cervical screening, was using the wrong protocol for three years to re-examine slides after they showed low-grade abnormalit­ies.

It was applying a HPV virus test on samples from the time they arrived in the lab instead of from the point they were taken.

The HSE said the risk to women was very low and the retest was precaution­ary.

Regular tests can now take 27 weeks to be returned, but these are prioritise­d.

The samples from the repeat tests will be sent to Quest Diagnostic­s for processing.

“We have been working closely with this laboratory to ensure appropriat­e measures have been put in place to avoid a recurrence of this issue,” a HSE spokeswoma­n said.

“All cases of cervical cancer in Ireland are notified to and recorded by the National Cancer Registry of Ireland (NCRI).

“Given the natural history of cervical cancer would indicate that the disease would normally develop over a period of 10 to 15 years, a considerab­le amount of time could have elapsed from the time a woman is screened until the time their case of cervical cancer is notified to the NCRI.

“Additional­ly, the tests which were affected by the HPV expiration issue were all processed relatively recently, ie since 2015.

“Due to these very facts, CervicalCh­eck would not have an accurate or timely record of the number of women who may have been diagnosed with cervical cancer since their last test,” the spokeswoma­n for the HSE added.

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