Cervical risk
Screening
ASCCP
Endometrial Cancer
AUB Workup
100

•Which HPV subtypes cause ~2/3 of cervical cancers?

HPV 16 and 18

• HPV 16 and 18 are the most oncogenic strains and are responsible for most high-grade lesions and cancers.

100

•Earliest age HPV vaccination can be started?

 Age 9

Vaccination before HPV exposure offers maximal protection.

100

•Immediate CIN3+ risk threshold for colposcopy?

 ≥4%

 ASCCP guidelines are risk-based, not result-based.

100

•Most common symptom of endometrial cancer?

 Postmenopausal bleeding

 Occurs in ~90% of patients

100

•First-line test for postmenopausal bleeding?

 TVUS or endometrial biopsy

 Either acceptable depending on risk and availability.

200

•What percentage of cervical cancers are HPV-associated?

~99.7%

 Virtually all cervical cancers are linked to persistent oncogenic HPV infection

200

•Preferred screening age 30–65 for average-risk patients?

 Primary HPV testing every 5 years

 USPSTF/ACOG prefer HPV-based screening due to higher sensitivity.

200

•When is expedited treatment preferred?

: Risk ≥60%

High probability of CIN3+ justifies treatment without biopsy.

200

•Greatest modifiable risk factor in US?

Obesity

Adipose tissue increases peripheral estrogen production.

200

•Which biopsy result mandates hysterectomy?

Endometrial hyperplasia with atypia (EIN)

High risk of progression to carcinoma.

300

Which immunocompromised condition increases progression risk >4x?

 HIV infection

 HIV impairs immune clearance of HPV, increasing persistence and malignant transformation

300

•Why no screening before age 21?

 High spontaneous clearance & harm from overtreatment


 Most HPV infections regress; procedures increase preterm birth risk.

300

•Normal colpo but glandular cytology → next step?

Endocervical curettage

 Evaluates endocervical lesions not visible on ectocervix.

300

•Condition causing chronic unopposed estrogen?

 PCOS

Anovulation leads to persistent endometrial stimulation.

300

•Why is ablation contraindicated in suspected cancer?

 Masks pathology and delays diagnosis

 Residual malignancy may persist undetected.

400

>10 years of OCP use confers what cervical cancer risk?

 Relative risk ~2.2–2.5

 Risk increases with duration of estrogen exposure, though benefits exist for other cancers.

400

Who age 27–45 should still get HPV vaccine?

 High-risk individuals


Those with new partners or STI risk may benefit from protection against new strains.

400

•Best imaging for nodal metastases >10 mm?

FDG-PET

More sensitive than CT or MRI for lymph nodes.

400

•Type 1 vs Type 2 endometrial cancer: which has worse prognosis?

 Type 2 (serous/clear cell)

 Type 2 cancers are aggressive and hormone-independent.

400

•Why TVUS unreliable in premenopausal women?

Cyclic endometrial thickness variation


 Thickness varies by menstrual phase.

500

Name two socioeconomic factors increasing cervical cancer risk.

Low socioeconomic status; low education level

These factors limit access to vaccination, screening, and follow-up.

500

•HPV vaccination after CIN treatment reduces recurrence by what %?

 ~59%

 Acts as secondary prevention after excisional treatment.

500

•Fertility-sparing option for stage IA1 cervical cancer?

 Cervical conization

 Appropriate for microinvasive disease with negative margins.

500

•Protective factor against endometrial cancer? (Name one)

•Combined OCPs, LNG-IUD, parity

progestins counteract estrogen-driven proliferation.

500

•Persistent AUB despite benign biopsy → next step?

Repeat biopsy or further evaluation


 Single negative biopsy does not rule out cancer.

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