1. Effects of speculum lubrication on cervical smears for cervical cancer screening: A double blind randomized clinical trial.
- Author
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Ilika CP, Eleje GU, Chiemeka ME, Ilika FN, Ikechebelu JI, Ilika VC, Ugwu EO, Ofor IJ, Ogelle OM, Umeononihu OS, Mamah JE, Olisa CL, Ezeigwe CO, Nwankwo ME, Ofojebe CJ, Okafor CC, Ekwebene OC, Nnabuchi OK, and Okafor CG
- Subjects
- Humans, Female, Adult, Middle Aged, Double-Blind Method, Surgical Instruments, Uterine Cervical Neoplasms diagnosis, Vaginal Smears methods, Papanicolaou Test, Early Detection of Cancer methods, Lubrication
- Abstract
Background: Speculum lubrication may help to reduce the pain experienced during Pap-smear collection and hence increase uptake of cervical cancer screening and repeat testing, but there are fears of its interference with cytological results., Aim: To determine and compare the adequacy of cervical cytology smears and the mean pain scores of women undergoing cervical cancer screening with or without speculum lubrication., Methods: This was a randomised controlled study of 132 women having cervical cancer screening at a tertiary hospital in Nigeria. Sixty-six participants were randomly assigned to the 'Gel' and 'No Gel' groups, respectively. Pap smears were collected from each participant with a lubricated speculum ('Gel group') or a non-lubricated speculum ('No Gel group'). The primary outcome measures were the proportion of women with unsatisfactory cervical cytology smears and the mean numeric rating scale pain scores, while the secondary outcome measures were the proportion of women who were willing to come for repeat testing and the cytological diagnosis of Pap-smear results., Results: The baseline socio-demographic variables were similar in both groups. There was no significant difference in the proportion of unsatisfactory cervical smear results between the two groups (13.6% vs. 21.2%, p = 0.359). However, the mean pain scores were significantly lower in the gel group than in the no gel group (45.04 vs. 87.96; p<0.001). An equal proportion of the participants in each group (90.9% vs. 90.9%; p > 0.999) were willing to come for repeat cervical smears in the future., Conclusion: Speculum lubrication did not affect the adequacy of cervical smears but significantly reduced the pain experienced during pap smear collection. Also, it did not significantly affect the willingness to come for repeat cervical smears in the future., Trial Registration: The trial was registered with the Pan-African Clinical Trial Registry with a unique identification and registration number: PACTR2020077533364675., Competing Interests: The authors have declared that no competing interests exist., (Copyright: © 2024 Ilika et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.)
- Published
- 2024
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