National Coverage Analysis (NCA) View Public Comments

Screening for Cervical Cancer with Human Papillomavirus (HPV) Testing

Public Comments

Commenter Comment Information
Hansen, Christopher Title: President
Organization: American Cancer Society Cancer Action Network
Date: 05/15/2015
Comment:

The American Cancer Society Cancer Action Network (ACS CAN) appreciates the opportunity to provide comments on the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services’ (CMS’) proposed decision memo for screening for cervical cancer with human papillomavirus (HPV) testing. CMS proposes that there exists sufficient evidence to add HPV testing once every five years as an additional preventive service benefit under the Medicare program for asymptomatic beneficiaries aged 30 to 65 in conjunction with

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Blackwelder, MD, FAAFP, Reid B. Title: Board Chair
Organization: American Academy of Family Physicians (AAFP)
Date: 05/11/2015
Comment:

May 11, 2015

Tamara Syrek Jensen, JD
Director, Coverage and Analysis Group
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services
7500 Security Boulevard
Baltimore, MD 21244

RE: Screening for Cervical Cancer with Human Papillomavirus Testing (CAG-00442N)

Dear Ms. Syrek Jensen,

On behalf of the American Academy of Family Physicians (AAFP), which represents 120,900 family physicians and medical students across the country, I write in response to

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Lee, Judith Title: Sr. Compliance Analyst
Organization: Highmark
Date: 05/04/2015
Comment:
Highmark endorses the addition of this preventive benefit as this is in line with the updated recommendation from the US Preventive Services Task Force, http://www.uspreventiveservicestaskforce.org/Page/Topic/recommendation-summary/cervical-cancer-screening
Wright, M.D., M.P.H., Alan T. Title: Chief Medical Officer
Organization: Roche Diagnostics Corporation
Date: 05/01/2015
Comment:

May 1, 2015

Tamara Syrek Jensen, JD
Director, Coverage and Analysis Group
Joseph Chin, MD, MS
Acting Deputy Director, Coverage and Analysis Group
Centers for Medicaid & Medicare Services
7500 Security Boulevard
Mailstop: S3-02-01
Baltimore, MD 21244

RE: Proposed Decision Memo for Screening for Cervical Cancer with Human Papillomavirus (HPV) Testing (CAG-00442N)

Dear Ms. Syrek Jensen and Dr. Chin:

I

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Patin, MD, FAAFP, Janet Title: Family Physician, Medical Director PCPCH
Organization: Dunes Family Health Care
Date: 04/30/2015
Comment:
I write in support of covering Pap + HPV every 5 years for cervical cancer screening in women 30-65 yo. Please note that if the Pap is normal but the HPV is positive, the follow up recommendation is for repeat Pap + HPV in 12 months, and if that's negative, repeat contesting in 3 years. Policy should allow the recommended follow up intervals, and not just once every 5 years regardless of result. This may require additional coding from the provider to indicate this is follow up of abnormal

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Fernandes, Karen Title: President
Organization: AYR Consulting Group
Date: 04/27/2015
Comment:

The DES Community requests that In Utero Exposure to the drug Diethylstilbestrol (DES) be added to the screening for cervical Cancer in this proposed CMS decision memo. Due to in utero exposure to the drug DES, a carcinogen and teratogen, DES Daughters and now DES Granddaughters are at a higher risk for developing cervical cancer as well as other reproductive cancers. I am attaching a NCI

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Lunardi, Teresa Title: Physician Assistant, PA-C
Organization: Women First, LLC
Date: 04/23/2015
Comment:
As a physician assistant (working in ob/gyn for 11 years) and member of ASCCP (the organization that creates cervical cancer screening guidelines), I feel it is imperative for us to be able to perform high risk HPV testing on our patients who have Medicare. Failure to do so makes us unable to adequately triage and evaluate ASCUS cytology results (a very common result in the postmenopausal population). Because the presence or absence of high risk HPV creates two completely different clinical

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Ingraham, Christine Title: Laboratory Manager
Date: 04/20/2015
Comment:

As a Cytotechnologist, Lab Manager and educator for over 37 I am opposed to Primary HPV screening at 5 year intervals. The HPV vaccination campaign used the motto "Just one." Isn't saving "just one" life with 3 year intervals of Paps and HPV co-testing worth it, too? Here is data to support my argument and plea to endorse pap and HPV co-testing at 3 year intervals:

Comparison of cervical cancer screening results among 256,648 women in multiple clinical practices.
Blatt AJ1,

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Spear, Nancy Date: 04/17/2015
Comment:
I fully support this decision. [PHI Redacted] In addition to this change, I would like to see Medicare also cover GYN exams annually since mammograms are & need to be ordered by the Dr. All GYN covered services should be aligned & are especially important for women of a child bearing, sexually active, age.
White-McCoy, Adele Organization: Private American Citizen
Date: 04/17/2015
Comment:
Women are living beyond the age of 65 and I strongly feel that the screening should be applied up to age 80.
Wagnac, Wesley Organization: RIH
Date: 04/17/2015
Comment:

The work done on this issue is commendable. It seems reasonable that co-testing should be used to continue to decrease ICC mortality. The 5-year period for subsequent testing, however, raises some questions.

According to the data, there were over 4000 deaths from ICC in 2014. That would imply that the number of diagnosed patients was much higher, assuming that everyone diagnosed with ICC does not die from it. But even if it were so, that would mean 50% of those who died we

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Albright, Dorothy Date: 04/17/2015
Comment:
As a cytotechnologist and patient, I strongly urge CMS to reconsider it's decision and recommend that a 3-year interval is much safer and has a lower cumulative risk for CIN III and ICC than a 5-year interval. If you look at data from Gage, et al JNCL 2014 there is a 54% increase in cumulative risk of CIN III at 5 years compared to 3, and a 50% increase in risk of ICC at 5 years with co-testing. This population is also at increased risk for endometrial cancer and although the pap isn't

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Duberowski, J Date: 04/17/2015
Comment:

This recent publication is a good rationale for co-testing every 3 years instead of every 5 years as CMS is proposing and and suggested by the USPTF.

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25568989
"After a single negative cotest result, the risk of cervical cancer is twice as large at 5 years as it is at 3 years. Modeling published since the 2012 guidelines were drafted indicates that extending the cotesting screening interval from 3 to 5 years at ages 30-64 years will result

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Rund, Chad Title: Pathologist
Organization: Aurora Diagnostics, GPA Laboratories
Date: 04/17/2015
Comment:

Co-testing at 3yr intervals for asymptomatic women 30-65yrs old is clearly established as a guideline from the major colposcopy, pathology and gynecological societies.

Extending the co-testing to 5yrs will cause harm.

I strongly encourage the CMS recommendations to be adjusted to the 3yr increment for co-testing in asymptomatic women 30-65yrs.

Chad R. Rund, D.O., FCAP
Anatomical and Clinical Pathologist
Greensboro, NC
Tullous, Jill Organization: n/a
Date: 04/17/2015
Comment:
All should be done to eradicate this virus.
Saitas MD, Vasiliki Organization: Meadowlands Hospital Medical Center
Date: 04/17/2015
Comment:

This proposal is, in my medical opinion, criminal.
A woman who changes sexual partners within this age frame (30-65) is subject to HPV infection, both high risk and low risk. To think that she can go for 5 years without a Pap test while being sexually active and exposed- is a very misguided idea.
Are any of the people involved in this decision actually WORKING as OB/GYN's, cytopathologists or nurse practitioners with a high risk population?? I didn't think so.
The rate of

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Jacobson, Heidi Title: Mother
Organization: US Citizen
Date: 04/16/2015
Comment:

PROPOSAL:

AGREE; I AM PLEASED WITH THIS DECISION, AS THIS WILL HAVE A GREAT IMPACT ON THE FUTURE OF ALL OF OUR CHILDREN, BROTHERS, SISTERS, ETC.

The authors state, “Based on large trials, primary screening using a clinically validated HPV test, such as HC2, appears very promising in women aged 35 years and older, particularly when coupled with reflex cytology to triage positive HPV results before colposcopy.”

AGREE.

REQUIRED TESTS ANNUALLY FOR

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