You know that moment when you’re at the gynaecologist, or the GP, and your pap smear is over, and your pelvic exam begins?
The doctor generally feels around your belly and pelvic area while also having their fingers inside you. It’s generally uncomfortable (as is the entire pap smear process), and occasionally even unpleasant. But like so many other things in life, it’s something women put up with because we know that it’s good for our health.
Except… it might not be so good for our health after all. In fact, pelvic exams have been making headlines for some time now, with various studies suggesting that the entire exam process is actually relatively useless.
And last week, the American College of Physicians – America’s largest medical-specialty organisation – released new guidelines that give a “strong recommendation” against performing pelvic examinations on women who are not pregnant and have no symptoms.
The ACP reviewed published literature from 1946 through to 2014 to determine just how useful the pelvic exam is when screening for pathology. They examined accuracy of the screening pelvic examination in detecting cancer, pelvic inflammatory disease and other gynecologic conditions. They also examined issues relating to overdiagnosis and overtreatment, with false positives being very common.
The result? The “diagnostic accuracy of the pelvic examination” was very low – in other words, it did little to detect any problems. 96.7% to 100% of abnormal pelvic examinations did not identify ovarian cancer, and there was no reduction in cancer mortality rates that could be associated with the pelvic examination.
However, significant harms were found through the study – including “fear, anxiety, embarrassment, pain, discomfort and urinary tract infections and symptoms, such as dysuria and frequent urination.” 10% to 80% of women who experienced a pelvic exam reported feeling fear, embarrassment, or anxiety, and some even experienced pain – as a result, they were less likely to return for another exam.
Top Comments
It surprises me we're still talking about the bimanual pelvic exam, thankfully, it hasn't been recommended for many years. American women are pressured and even coerced into this exam annually for most of their lives and their results speak for themselves, poor.
1 in 3 US women will have a hysterectomy by age 60, more than twice the number carried out in countries who don't perform routine pelvic exams. The same number applies to the removal of healthy ovaries. Dr Carolyn Westhoff, US obgyn, partly blames the routine pelvic exam for these statistics. (check out her articles online)
I know some Australian doctors still tack this exam onto a pap test, I'd challenge or avoid any doctor still doing this exam, at the very least they should obtain express informed consent before the exam.
I doubt many women would agree to it if they were told it's an exam of poor clinical value and carries risk, even unnecessary surgery. Assuming consent is unacceptable.
Also, 2 yearly pap testing is serious over-screening, I think more women are working that out, this is why we have huge referral rates for excess biopsies and over-treatment. Over-screening and early screening are not evidence based and produce lots more false positives for no additional benefit to women.
Now we know MOST women can't benefit from pap testing, only about 5% of women aged 30 to 60 are HPV+, these are the only women who should be offered a 5 yearly pap test. Women can also, test themselves for HPV reliably and safely with the Delphi Screener. (it won't be mentioned to you, but you can get it through your GP or buy it online)
The new Dutch program is the best in the world, in my opinion, for those women who wish to test, they'll scrap their long standing 7 pap test program, 5 yearly from 30 to 60, and offer instead 5 HPV primary tests or self testing at ages 30,35,40,50 and 60 and the roughly 5% who are HPV+ will be the ONLY women offered a pap test. This is likely to save more lives, concentrating on the small number of women actually at risk, but just as importantly, takes most women out of pap testing and harms way.
Pap testing and HPV testing before age 30 is not recommended and is not supported by the evidence, it simply worries lots of young women and exposes them to risk. Young women produce the most false positive pap tests that can lead to excess biopsies and over-treatment. Sadly, no country in the world has shown a benefit pap testing young women, these VERY rare cases occur whether you pap test or not. HPV testing is not recommended either as about 40% of young women would test HPV+, transient and harmless infections that will clear naturally in a year or two.
This is not new evidence, it's been known for a long time now.
The Finns have the lowest rates of this always-fairly-rare cancer (lifetime risk of less than 1%, 0.65%) in the world and they refer FAR fewer women for colposcopy, biopsy and treatments. Since the 1960s they've offered 7 pap tests, 5 yearly from 30 to 60. We "treat" more than 10 times the number of women than a country like Finland and we're still urging women to have 26 (or more) pap tests, why?
Our program should have been changed LONG ago, it also, sounds like our new program will again side with excess. I've never taken part in the Aussie program, I value my health and quality of life.
It's cruel to put women through unnecessary and excessive testing and not to offer self testing options, many women find speculum exams very painful, some find them intolerable. Post menopausal women can fall into that category, yet women could simply test themselves for HPV, most would be HPV- and can forget about pap testing.
Those HPV- and no longer sexually active might choose to forget about further testing, others might like to self-test again according to the Dutch schedule, no more than 5 times in total between ages 30 and 60.
HPV Today, Edition 24, sets out the new Dutch program.
I don't know what we're doing in this country, but it's certainly, IMO, not in the best interests of women. (not even close)
I've never had a routine bimanual exam in my life and would sack any doctor who suggested such a thing, it would suggest to me they were out of date. I'm not interested in excess or non evidence based tests or exams.
I've also, declined breast screening - any woman considering breast screening, please read the summary prepared by the Nordic Cochrane Institute, an independent, not for profit, medical research group. (go to their website)
In my opinion, the best decisions are informed decisions. I don't believe we can trust the official discourse, I've found it to be unreliable. The AMA, for example, is still urging women to engage in early and serious over-screening, it doesn't take much research at all to find that's bad medical advice.
I have had many pap smears over the years, some with pelvic exams and some without. I seriously do not understand what the big deal is. Yes, I want to be sure i have showered just before, other than that i don't care about it at all. I have rarely found it uncomfortable and even then only because the speculum hasn't been warmed up. I have known from my 20's that my right ovary is enlarged, and has remained that way. The last one I had, was with a new doctor and I was so covered by a sheet, I wondered whether he could see anything. I know there are always going to be some women who for various reasons, struggle with this issue but i really don't think that articles like this are at all helpful when they demonise the experience which is just another routine test by a doctor who has seen it all before!