vault smear
Last reviewed 01/2018
- vault smears
- papanicolaou (Pap) smear tests of the vaginal vault are a means of detecting recurrent invasive or preinvasive disease of the lower female genital tract in women who do not have a cervix uteri
- indication for Pap smear tests of vaginal vault
- current policy in the UK is to follow up with vaginal vault smears those women who have had a hysterectomy for high-grade preinvasive disease of the cervix
- purpose of undertaking vault smears on asymptomatic women who had
no abnormal cervical pathology at hysterectomy is to screen for vaginal
intraepithelial neoplasia (VAIN) and prevent vaginal cancer
- VAIN is 150 times less common than cervical intraepithelial
neoplasia (CIN), and vaginal cancer is one of the rarest gynaecological
malignancies (0.7 per 100 000 women in UK)
- risk factors for VAIN include: CIN, immunosupression, genital
warts/human papilloma virus infection, radiation therapy and
smoking
- besides VAIN, the only group of women appearing to be
at increased risk of primary vaginal cancer are those
whose mothers took diethylstilbestrol during pregnancy
- besides VAIN, the only group of women appearing to be
at increased risk of primary vaginal cancer are those
whose mothers took diethylstilbestrol during pregnancy
- risk factors for VAIN include: CIN, immunosupression, genital
warts/human papilloma virus infection, radiation therapy and
smoking
- VAIN is 150 times less common than cervical intraepithelial
neoplasia (CIN), and vaginal cancer is one of the rarest gynaecological
malignancies (0.7 per 100 000 women in UK)
- schedule for vault smears following hysterectomy:
- women who have had a hysterectomy with CIN present are potentially
at risk of developing vaginal intraepithelial neoplasia (incidence
1%) and invasive vaginal disease
-
Patients within the cervical screening age who are undergoing hysterectomy (for another gynaecological cause) should have a negative test result within the screening interval. Otherwise a cervical sample should be obtained preoperatively (3).
- women who have had a hysterectomy with CIN present are potentially
at risk of developing vaginal intraepithelial neoplasia (VAIN)
and invasive vaginal disease. There is no clear evidence that
colposcopy increases the detection of disease on follow up.
Expert consensus opinion recommends that (3)
- for women on routine recall and with no CIN in their hysterectomy specimen, no further vaginal vault cytology is required
- women not on routine recall, and with no CIN in their hysterectomy specimen, should have vaginal vault cytology at six months following their hysterectomy
- women who undergo hysterectomy and have completely excised
CIN should have vaginal vault cytology at six and 18 months
following their hysterectomy
- for women who undergo hysterectomy and have incompletely
excised CIN (or uncertain excision), follow up should
be as if their cervix remained in situ
- CIN 1: vault cytology at six, 12 and 24 months
- CIN 2/3: vault cytology at six and 12 months, followed by nine annual vault cytology samples
- follow up for incompletely excised CIN continues to 65 years or until 10 years after surgery (whichever is later)
- as women who have undergone hysterectomy have no
cervix, and so are no longer eligible for recall within
the NHSCSP, their vault cytology following treatment
of CIN must be managed outside the programme
- since women who have undergone subtotal hysterectomy still have their cervix, they should remain in the National Screening Programme (3)
- women who have had a hysterectomy with CIN present are potentially
at risk of developing vaginal intraepithelial neoplasia (VAIN)
and invasive vaginal disease. There is no clear evidence that
colposcopy increases the detection of disease on follow up.
Expert consensus opinion recommends that (3)
-
- women who have had a hysterectomy with CIN present are potentially
at risk of developing vaginal intraepithelial neoplasia (incidence
1%) and invasive vaginal disease
Notes:
- by the age of 65 years, the proportion of women having a hysterectomy reaches
a third in the USA and 20% in the UK (60,000 procedures annually)
- subtotal surgery (sparing the cervix) is undertaken in less than 3% of the hysterectomies performed in the UK
- total hysterectomy includes removal of the cervix uteri leaving the vagina as a blind ending pouch; since the cervix has been removed, there is no possibility of the development of a primary cervical cancer and thus no indication for routine cervical screening
- benign indications (e.g. excessive bleeding or fibroid disease) account
for more than 90% of hysterectomies in the UK
- proportion of hysterectomies performed for cancer or precancerous lesions has been reported to range from 6 to 10%
Reference:
- 1. Stokes-Lampard H et al.Vaginal vault smears after hysterectomy for reasons other than malignancy: a systematic review of the literature. BJOG. 2006 Dec;113(12):1354-65
- 2. Tint Tint Wai and Dilip Patil. Modern management of abnormal cervical smear. BJMP 2008; 1(2)
- 3. NHS Cancer Screening Programmes 2010. Colposcopy and programme management. Guidelines for the NHS cervical screening programme 2nd edition