13 research outputs found

    The recurrence rate of CIN without residual HPV and with negative margins after LEEP.

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    The recurrence rate of CIN without residual HPV and with negative margins after LEEP.</p

    The recurrence rate of CIN with residual HPV and negative margins after LEEP.

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    The recurrence rate of CIN with residual HPV and negative margins after LEEP.</p

    The recurrence rate of CIN without residual HPV and with negative margins after LEEP.

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    The recurrence rate of CIN without residual HPV and with negative margins after LEEP.</p

    The residual rate of HPV after LEEP with negative margins.

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    The residual rate of HPV after LEEP with negative margins.</p

    PRISMA 2020 checklist.

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    BackgroundHPV is detected in up to 47% of CIN and up to 70% of cervical cancers. It can cause intraepithelial neoplasia, which can eventually progress to invasive carcinoma. Almost all cervical cancers are caused by HPV. Therefore, it is especially important to treat high-risk HPV. For patients who have undergone LEEP surgery, this procedure can effectively treat CIN. However, it has not been studied in a meta-analysis whether HPV remains after the surgery and whether residual HPV increases the recurrence risk of CIN. To address this gap, our study collected all relevant literature to investigate the residual rate of HPV and its potential influence on the recurrence rate of CIN. We aim to provide valuable recommendations for clinicians and patients.MethodsThe Cochrane Library, EMBASE, and PubMed databases were searched from the establishment of the database until October 2023. Stata 12.0 software was used for the statistical analysis.ResultsTwelve studies were included, with a total sample size of 1192 cases. The meta-analysis found that the recurrence rate of CIN was quite low [95% CI = 0.5% (0.001, 0.012); P = 0.006] when the margins were negative after LEEP and there was no residual HPV. When HPV was present, the recurrence rate of CIN was significantly higher [95% CI = 18% (0.089, 0.291), P = 0.000], even if the margins were negative. The recurrence rate of CIN with residual HPV was 3.6 times higher than the recurrence rate of CIN without residual HPV. The residual rate of HPV after LEEP with negative margins was 22.7% [95% CI (0.167, 0.294), P = 0.000], which remained relatively high.ConclusionThis meta-analysis found that the recurrence rate of CIN without residual HPV and with negative margins after LEEP was quite low, at 0.5%. However, when HPV was residual, the recurrence rate of CIN significantly increased to 18%, even if the margins were negative. The residual rate of HPV was 22.7%, even when the margins were negative after LEEP.</div

    The recurrence rate of CIN with residual HPV and negative margins after LEEP.

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    The recurrence rate of CIN with residual HPV and negative margins after LEEP.</p

    Forest plot of the residual rate of HPV after LEEP with negative margins.

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    Forest plot of the residual rate of HPV after LEEP with negative margins.</p

    Forest plot of the recurrence rate of CIN without residual HPV and with negative margins after LEEP.

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    Forest plot of the recurrence rate of CIN without residual HPV and with negative margins after LEEP.</p

    The residual rate of HPV after LEEP with negative margins.

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    The residual rate of HPV after LEEP with negative margins.</p

    The essential details of the included studies.

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    BackgroundHPV is detected in up to 47% of CIN and up to 70% of cervical cancers. It can cause intraepithelial neoplasia, which can eventually progress to invasive carcinoma. Almost all cervical cancers are caused by HPV. Therefore, it is especially important to treat high-risk HPV. For patients who have undergone LEEP surgery, this procedure can effectively treat CIN. However, it has not been studied in a meta-analysis whether HPV remains after the surgery and whether residual HPV increases the recurrence risk of CIN. To address this gap, our study collected all relevant literature to investigate the residual rate of HPV and its potential influence on the recurrence rate of CIN. We aim to provide valuable recommendations for clinicians and patients.MethodsThe Cochrane Library, EMBASE, and PubMed databases were searched from the establishment of the database until October 2023. Stata 12.0 software was used for the statistical analysis.ResultsTwelve studies were included, with a total sample size of 1192 cases. The meta-analysis found that the recurrence rate of CIN was quite low [95% CI = 0.5% (0.001, 0.012); P = 0.006] when the margins were negative after LEEP and there was no residual HPV. When HPV was present, the recurrence rate of CIN was significantly higher [95% CI = 18% (0.089, 0.291), P = 0.000], even if the margins were negative. The recurrence rate of CIN with residual HPV was 3.6 times higher than the recurrence rate of CIN without residual HPV. The residual rate of HPV after LEEP with negative margins was 22.7% [95% CI (0.167, 0.294), P = 0.000], which remained relatively high.ConclusionThis meta-analysis found that the recurrence rate of CIN without residual HPV and with negative margins after LEEP was quite low, at 0.5%. However, when HPV was residual, the recurrence rate of CIN significantly increased to 18%, even if the margins were negative. The residual rate of HPV was 22.7%, even when the margins were negative after LEEP.</div
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