The kit contains a long cotton-wool bud, used to swab the lining of the vagina for about 20 seconds.

This is sent to a laboratory to test for human papillomavirus (HPV) which causes most cervical cancers.

If this is positive, they are invited for a further test to see if any cells in the cervix have started the journey to becoming a cancer.

The trial ran in five London boroughs, in 2021, and 27,000 test kits were offered.

The results, published in eClinicalMedicine, showed:

If these results were replicated across the whole of England, the researchers estimate it would increase the proportion screened from 69.9% to 77.3% – about one million extra women over a three-year screening cycle.

The trial also showed self-testing reached women irrespective of their ethnicity or wealth.

Share.
Exit mobile version