new YORK (Reuters Health) – A panel of experts in

health United States concluded that women should

do the Pap smear or Pap every three years to detect

early cervical cancer and just starting at the

21 years, even if they are already sexually active.

The Declaration of the Group operation of Preventive services

( USPSTF for its acronym in English) coincides with the guides of three

Oncology scientific societies of the country presented the same

day.

At age 30, women should be eligible for the

every five years if you choose to combine the Pap testing

with the analysis of human papillomavirus (HPV) virus.

“Importantly the emphatic make recommendation, the

“”

analysis”, said Dr. Virginia Moyer, who chairs the USPSTF

and is the Baylor School of medicine and the Hospital pediatrician of

Children of Texas in Houston.

The recommendation for the Pap every three or five years

arises from the evidence that the cervical cancer is of

relatively slow growth so that the expert

it was considered unlikely that a woman develops cancer

Advanced in a few years after a negative result.

“Women who develop cervical cancer and

die for this cause are that no controls are made of

routine”, said Moyer. “The problem is not that women not be

performed a control in a couple of years”, added.

The new recommendations of the USPSTF arise from a review

of evidence of the effectiveness of the test for

detecting adverse effects and precancerous lesions

physical and psychological analysis of HPV and Pap test. Guides

are published in Annals of Internal Medicine.

The panel identified benefits of Pap test every three years in the

women aged between 21 and 65 years or every five years when it

combines with the analysis of HPV thirties.

The under 30 years old should not be the test of

detection of HPV because sexually transmitted infection, which

is common in young people, single disappears without raising the

risk of developing cancer.

The over 65s controlled way also regulate

would be protected, unless they have a high risk for

previous precancerous lesions.

Until more data on the female population

vaccinated against HPV, the panel recommends that women

continue the usual analysis.

The scientific societies agree

Guidelines are consistent with the American Society of

Oncology, the American Society of colposcopy and

Cervical pathologies and the American Society of

Pathology clinic.

These groups support the test with Pap and HPV analysis

every five years from the 1930s, but consider acceptable the

realization of Pap test every three years. Controls must be

occur between 21 and 65 years in the majority of cases.

In their report, published in CA: A Cancer Journal for

Clinicians and other magazines, the Group considers that without control,

between 31 and 33 of 1,000 women of United States

develop cervical cancer. With a Pap test every three

years, the figure is reduced to between five and eight each 1,000

women.

“Excessive and increasingly sensitive controls detect

“”

benign primary infections that would be better to not identify”,

thought Philip Castle, director of the Institute of the society

American pathology clinic, who participated in the

drafting of guidelines.

“Go beyond what recommends the evidence can cause damage to

“”

patients and not should be minimized”, he added.

This includes the psychological result effects

abnormal, followed by some uterine control procedures

increase the likelihood of later the patient

have a premature infant.

Centers for disease prevention and Control

estimated that, each year, some 12,000 American women

they develop cancer of cervix by a carcinogenic strain

of HPV.

Castle considered the most important thing is to work to that

all women have access to basic control levels

clinical, especially poor women in isolated areas.

Source: Annals of Internal Medicine and CA: A Cancer

Journal for Clinicians, online March 14, 2012.