Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Summary

Cervical cancer is one of the most common cancers in women and one of the leading causes of death in women worldwide. Pre-cancerous lesions (dysplasias) are detected by the gynecologist's preventive smear test and can thus contribute to a 100% chance of cure if they are clarified by a colposcopic examination as part of the dysplasia consultation and, if necessary, surgically removed. Conization (= surgical removal of a cone of tissue from the cervix) is the method of choice for removing the diseased tissue. LLETZ conization (Large Loop Excision of the Transformation Zone) is the worldwide standard surgical procedure for conization. There is risk of local persistence of the precancerous lesion if the cervical dysplasia is not completely removed. To minimize this, the iodine test can be used. Here, a 5% iodine solution (so-called Lugol's solution) is dabbed onto the cervix uteri, resulting in an intense and characteristic brown staining of the healthy cervical epithelium. Sites without staining are termed iodine negative and may contain dysplastic cells. The strength of iodine testing lies in its high specificity, i.e., the reliable ability to exclude false-positive results. The purpose of intraoperative iodine staining is to select the resection line with a high degree of certainty in healthy (i.e., iodine-positive) tissue in order to reduce the rate of cervical dysplasia that is not completely removed (so-called non-in-sano resection, or R1 resection). Systematic survey data from the dysplasia units certified in Germany on the question of the use of intraoperative iodine testing in Germany are lacking, as is the literature as a whole. For example, the current S3 guideline of the German Society of Gynecology and Obstetrics on the diagnosis and treatment of cervical dysplasia (as of March 2020) names intraoperative iodine testing only as a possible option for performing LLETZ. In this prospective, randomized study, the investigators aim to answer the question whether LLETZ performed with the help of an iodine test with selection of the resection line in the iodine-positive area leads to a lower rate of R1 resections compared to the standard LLETZ without iodine test.


Clinical Trial Description

1. Background 1.1. HPV and dysplasias of the cervix uteri Human papillomaviruses (HPV) are the most common sexually transmitted pathogens worldwide. The prevalence in both male and female populations is high. Epidemiological estimates suggest that 85-91% of sexually active adults acquire at least one genital HPV infection by the age of 50, with approximately 95% of HPV infections being spontaneously eliminated within 2 years in terms of HPV immunological clearance. HPV preferentially infects the epithelial cells of the anogenital area and, through incorporation of HPV DNA into the host genome of the basal cells of the squamous epithelium of the cervix and subsequent expression of viral components, causes dysplastic changes in the cervical epithelium that, if left untreated, can develop into invasive carcinoma of the cervix (cervical carcinoma). Cervical carcinoma is the fourth most common cancer as well as the fourth leading cause of cancer-related death in women worldwide, responsible for 6.6% (570,000) of all new cancer cases and 7.5% (311,000) of cancer-related deaths in women in 2018. The precursor of squamous cell carcinoma of the uterine cervix (approximately 80% of all cervical cancers) is cervical intraepithelial neoplasia (CIN), which has three grades of expression (CIN1, CIN 2, and CIN 3). Compared with invasive cervical carcinoma, the incidence of precancerous lesions of the cervix uteri is much higher. It is estimated that approximately 100,000 women in Germany develop high-grade dysplasia (CIN2/CIN3) annually. 1.2. Surgical treatment If precancerous lesions with the potential to develop into an invasive cervical tumor are detected, conization (= surgical removal of a cone of tissue from the cervix) is the method of choice for removing the diseased tissue. Worldwide standard as surgical procedure for conization is LLETZ-conization (Large Loop Excision of the Transformation Zone). In addition to the risk of local persistence of the precancerous lesion if the cervical dysplasia is incompletely removed, LLETZ also increases the risk of preterm birth in a subsequent pregnancy. This risk increases with increasing volume of removed tissue. To reduce or avoid the aforementioned complications, conization should be performed under colposcopic vision and as little healthy cervical tissue as possible should be removed. One method of LLETZ that is as tissue-conserving as possible is the intraoperative use of the so-called 'iodine test'. 1.3. The iodine test For the identification of healthy squamous epithelium of the cervix uteri, the so-called Schiller's iodine test can be used, which has been part of the clinical routine in the context of colposcopy of cervical dysplasias for decades. In the iodine test, a 5% iodine solution (so-called Lugol's solution) is dabbed onto the cervix uteri, resulting in an intense and characteristic brown staining of the healthy cervical epithelium. Sites without staining are termed iodine negative and may contain dysplastic cells. The strength of iodine testing lies in its high specificity, i.e., the reliable ability to exclude false-positive results. Not all iodine-negative areas contain CIN, but iodine-positive areas are almost certainly healthy. In some centers, because of these characteristics of the iodine sample, it is used during LLETZ to define the resection line of LLETZ. The aim of this approach is to select the resection line with a high degree of certainty in healthy (i.e., iodine-positive) tissue in order to reduce the rate of cervical dysplasia that is not completely removed (so-called 'non-in-sano resection' or 'R1 resection'). Systematic survey data from the dysplasia units certified in Germany on the question of the use of intraoperative iodine testing in Germany are lacking. The current S3 guideline of the German Society of Gynecology and Obstetrics on the diagnosis and therapy of cervical dysplasia (as of March 2020) also refers to intraoperative iodine testing as a possible option for performing LLETZ. However, exact figures from controlled studies on the usefulness of iodine test-guided LLETZ are lacking in the literature (PubMed search on 10/15/2021; search terms: cervical dysplasia, colposcopy, Lugol's test, iodine test, Lugol's staining; LLETZ; LEEP; conization). At our certified dysplasia center, it is the decision of the respective surgeon whether an additional intraoperative iodine test is performed or not. 2. Aim of the study The aim of this study is to answer the question under prospective randomized conditions whether LLETZ performed with the aid of iodine assay with selection of the resection line in the iodine-positive region leads to a lower rate of R1 resections compared with standard LLETZ without iodine assay. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT05132114
Study type Interventional
Source Ruhr University of Bochum
Contact Clemens B Temfper, MD, MBA
Phone +492323499
Email clemens.tempfer@rub.de
Status Recruiting
Phase N/A
Start date January 17, 2022
Completion date October 2024

See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Recruiting NCT04098744 - Artesunate Vaginal Inserts for the Treatment of Cervical Intraepithelial Neoplasia (CIN2/3) Phase 2
Recruiting NCT04226313 - Self-sampling for Non-attenders to Cervical Cancer Screening N/A
Completed NCT01435590 - Endocervical Evaluation With the Curette Versus Cytobrush for the Diagnosis of Dysplasia of the Uterine Cervix N/A
Completed NCT00212381 - Oral Diindolylmethane (DIM) for the Treatment of Cervical Dysplasia Phase 3
Completed NCT05234112 - Prevention and Screening Towards Elimination of Cervical Cancer N/A
Completed NCT04133610 - HPVPro Study: Comparison of HPV Detection in Clinician-collected Cervical Swabs and Self-sampled Cervicovaginal Swabs N/A
Recruiting NCT06086054 - Effect of a Childcare Resource on Cervical Cancer Prevention N/A
Not yet recruiting NCT04191603 - TWO DÄ°FFERENT ELECTROSURGERY DEVICES AS MONOPOLAR HOOC AND PLASMAKINETIC BIPOLAR SPATULA EFFECTIVENESS DURING COLPOTOMY N/A
Active, not recruiting NCT02250716 - A Comparison of Immediate Treatment of CIN1 With Cryotherapy and 12 Month Cytology Follow up in HIV Seropositive Women N/A
Active, not recruiting NCT06452004 - Validation of Artificial Intelligence as Decision Support System in VIA (PRESCRIP-TEC) N/A
Recruiting NCT05640700 - Vaginal Microbiome and HPV Pre-malignant and Cervical Dysplasia
Completed NCT03502798 - Coherence Imaging of the Cervical Epithelium With Scanning a/LCI N/A
Recruiting NCT06137950 - Interferon Alpha Therapy for Cervical CINI and HPV Infection Phase 1
Withdrawn NCT01925378 - A Phase II Single-arm Intervention Trial of Nelfinavir in Patients With Grade 2/3 or 3 Cervical Intraepithelial Neoplasia Phase 2
Completed NCT01766284 - Study of the Diagnostic Efficacy of "Real Time" Niris 1300e Optical Coherence Tomography (OCT) Imaging System in the Management of Pre-invasive and Invasive Neoplasia of the Uterine Cervix N/A
Completed NCT01524003 - Chinese Cancer Prevention Study(CHICAPS) N/A
Completed NCT04679675 - Self-Testing Options in the Era of Primary HPV Screening for Cervical Cancer Trial N/A
Recruiting NCT04045652 - Factors Predicting Persistence of Oncogenic HPV and Cervical Dysplasia in HIV Infected Kenyan Women
Completed NCT05756192 - Educational Video's Impact on Knowledge Regarding Cervical Cancer Screening N/A
Enrolling by invitation NCT04915495 - The Use of the LuViva Advanced Cervical Scan to Identify Women at High-Risk for Cervical Neoplasia N/A