Clinical Trial Details
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Phase IIIInterventional
The Use of the LuViva Advanced Cervical Scan to Identify Women at High-Risk for Cervical Neoplasia
Protocol: STUDY00002893NCT: NCT04915495
Overview
This study is designed to demonstrate that a multimodal hyperspectral device (LuViva) is able to segregate women with abnormal screening tests into Low and High risk groups for the purpose of determining whether they require enhanced colposcopy and additional biopsies in order to increase detection of CIN2+ cervical disease.
Eligibility
| Ages | 18 Years and older |
| Sex | Female |
| Healthy Volunteers | No |
| Age Groups | Adult, Older Adult |
Inclusion Criteria:
- Able to read or understand and give informed consent
- Referral Pap test within 120 days
- Scheduled for colposcopy based on the 2019 ASCCP Management Guidelines that fall within the 4% to 59% Immediate CIN3+ risk with the exception of women who lack a cervix or may be pregnant and are recommended to colposcopy.*
- Notes: The rationale for defining the referral inclusion criteria as women scheduled for colposcopy is that this group has been identified with having a significant likelihood of being diagnosed with CIN2+ over the two year period after being referred to colposcopy because of an abnormal screening test or tests. For example, the ALTS results showed that women with ASC-US plus high-risk HPV, LSIL, ASC-H, AGC and HSIL all had a likelihood of CIN2+ of approximately 10% to 20% or greater in the cases of ASC-H and HSIL (5). More recently, it has been shown that this threshold also carries with it a 4% or greater likelihood of immediate CIN3+ (12).
Exclusion Criteria:
- Pregnancy
- Menstruating on the day of colposcopy and LuViva test
- Radiation therapy to her genitourinary system within 1 year
- Prior hysterectomy in which cervix was removed
- Congenital anatomical cervical variant (e.g., double cervix)
- Friable cervix at the time of the study (i.e., a cervix that bleeds easily upon minimal contact or trauma)
- Post-coital or other significant bleeding at the time of the exam
- Excessive cervical mucous or discharge that cannot be removed and is significant enough, in the opinion of the Investigator, to interfere with a Pap test or colposcopy, resulting from inflammation, bacterial infection or other sources
- History of any photosensitizing disease or other disease affected by Ultra-violet radiation, (e.g., pophyria, Lupus Erythematosus).
- Undergoing phototherapy
- Recent use of photosensitizing agents, such as fluoroquinolones or retinoids
- Under-screened populations - defined as those women who have not been screened within the past 5 years who also screen positive for any HPV genotype
