Why Regular Pap Smears Are Important for Women’s Health | Dr. Anju Bala

Cervical cancer has one of the highest survival rates among cancers when detected early. The reason? Regular Pap smears screening. At North Delhi Uro & Gynae Clinic, we emphasize that a simple, routine test can save your life.

What is a Pap Smear?

A Pap smear (or Pap test) is a simple, painless screening test that collects cells from the cervix (the opening of the uterus) to detect precancerous and cancerous conditions. It’s named after Dr. George Papanicolaou, who developed the test in the 1920s.

Why Pap Smears Save Lives

Since the introduction of Pap smear screening, cervical cancer deaths have declined by 70% in developed countries. This dramatic reduction is directly attributable to early detection through regular screening. Here’s why:

  • Precancer Detection: Pap smears detect abnormal cells (dysplasia) before they become cancer
  • Early Cancer Detection: Cancer caught at stage 1 has >95% 5-year survival rate
  • Prevention: Many precancerous changes never progress to cancer, especially with treatment

Cervical Cancer: The Basic Facts

  • Second most common cancer in women worldwide
  • In India: ~123,000 new cases annually, ~77,000 deaths
  • Primary cause: Human Papillomavirus (HPV) infection
  • Preventable and curable when detected early

Understanding HPV and Cervical Cancer

What is HPV? Human Papillomavirus is a common sexually transmitted virus: – More than 100 types identified – High-risk types (16, 18, 31, 33) cause cervical cancer – Most sexually active people contract HPV at some point – Body usually clears infection naturally

HPV and Cancer Development: – Persistent high-risk HPV infection causes abnormal cell changes – Changes progress: Normal → Mild dysplasia → Moderate dysplasia → Severe dysplasia → Invasive cancer – Timeline: Typically 10-15 years for normal cells to become cancer – This long timeline is why screening works perfectly—we detect changes before cancer develops

Pap Smear Screening Guidelines

Current Recommendations:Age 21-30: Every 3 years if sexually active – Age 30-65: Every 3 years, or every 5 years if combined with HPV testing – Age >65: Stop screening if previous normal results – Post-hysterectomy: No screening needed if cervix removed

Important Points: – Screening starts after first sexual intercourse – Women should be offered routine screening in organized programs – Self-sampling HPV tests are emerging as valuable alternatives

The Pap Test Procedure

The procedure takes just 2-3 minutes and is completely painless:

  1. Patient Position: You’ll lie on the examination table with feet in stirrups
  2. Speculum Insertion: A metal or plastic speculum gently opens the vagina
  3. Cell Collection: Your doctor uses a small spatula or brush to gently scrape cells from the cervix
  4. Sample Preparation: Cells are placed on a glass slide or in liquid medium
  5. Laboratory Analysis: Cells examined under a microscope for abnormalities
  6. Results: Usually available in 7-10 days

Best Timing for Pap Test: – Not during menstruation (interferes with sample quality) – 5 days after menstruation starts through day 20 of cycle – Avoid intercourse, douching, vaginal products 24 hours before – Reschedule if you have vaginal infection

Understanding Pap Test Results

Normal/Negative Results: – No abnormal cells detected – Continue routine screening per guidelines – Approximately 80-90% of tests

ASC-US (Atypical Squamous Cells of Undetermined Significance): – Minor cell changes of unclear significance – Reflex HPV testing recommended – If HPV positive: Colposcopy needed – If HPV negative: Routine screening

Low-Grade Dysplasia (LSIL): – Mild cell abnormalities – HPV-related changes – Management: HPV testing or repeat Pap in 12 months – Most regress spontaneously

High-Grade Dysplasia (HSIL): – Moderate to severe cell abnormalities – Significant cancer risk – Management: Colposcopy with biopsy required – May need treatment

Malignant/Cancerous: – Cancer cells present – Immediate specialist referral required – Treatment planning essential

What Happens After an Abnormal Result?

Colposcopy: – Magnified visualization of cervix – Biopsy taken if lesions identified – Safe, office procedure – Allows accurate diagnosis

Treatment Options (if needed):Loop Electrosurgical Excision (LEEP): Removes abnormal tissue – Cold Knife Conization: Surgical removal – Laser Therapy: Destroys abnormal cells – Cryotherapy: Freezing destroys cells – Success rate: 90-95% for cervical intraepithelial neoplasia (CIN)

HPV Testing: The Modern Approach

Primary HPV Testing: – Tests for high-risk HPV directly – More sensitive than Pap smear – Recommended for ages 25-65 – Can be done every 5 years if negative – Now considered preferred screening method

Combined HPV + Pap (Co-testing): – Both tests performed simultaneously – More sensitive than either alone – Good option if HPV unavailable – Intervals based on results

Self-Collected HPV Tests: – Woman collects sample from vagina at home – Acceptable alternative for HPV testing – Increasing accessibility – Same accuracy as provider-collected samples

Risk Factors for Cervical Cancer

You have higher cervical cancer risk if you: – Started sexual intercourse before age 18 – Have multiple sexual partners – Have history of STIs – Smoke (weakens immune response) – Have weakened immune system (HIV/AIDS) – Are immunosuppressed (post-transplant) – Never had Pap smear screening

Prevention Beyond Screening

HPV Vaccination: – Prevents infection with high-risk HPV types – Ideal age: 9-13 years (catch-up through age 26) – Can be given up to age 45 – 3-dose series (can be 2-dose in young adolescents) – >99% effective at preventing vaccine-type HPV

Lifestyle Prevention: – Limit sexual partners – Use condoms (prevents most HPV transmission) – Don’t smoke – Maintain healthy weight – Regular exercise – Manage stress

What Dr. Anju Bala Recommends

“Pap smear screening is one of the most successful cancer prevention tools we have,” explains Dr. Anju Bala (MBBS, MD, DNB, Obstetrician & Gynaecologist). “Women who maintain regular screening rarely develop invasive cervical cancer. It’s truly a test that saves lives.”

Common Misconceptions

Myth 1: “Pap smears cause cervical cancer.” Fact: Pap smears are screening tests, not treatments. They cannot cause cancer.

Myth 2: “If I’m vaccinated, I don’t need Pap smears.” Fact: Vaccine doesn’t protect against all HPV types. Screening still needed.

Myth 3: “Normal results mean I have no cancer risk.” Fact: Pap smear has 85-95% sensitivity. Rarely, cancer can develop between screenings.

Myth 4: “Pap smears are painful.” Fact: Minimal discomfort. Most women report no pain.

Why Choose North Delhi Uro & Gynae Clinic?

  • Experienced gynaecologist (Dr. Anju Bala)
  • Accurate testing with quality laboratory processing
  • Timely results
  • Clear counseling about results and next steps
  • Appropriate follow-up based on individual risk
  • Supportive care for abnormal results

Taking Action

If you haven’t had a Pap smear in over 3 years (or per guidelines), schedule one today. If you have abnormal results, don’t panic—most are manageable, especially if detected early.

Your cervical health is too important to ignore.

Contact North Delhi Uro & Gynae Clinic: – Address: C-5, Model Town 3, New Delhi 110009 – Phone: 9910118030 – Doctor: Dr. Anju Bala (MBBS, MD, DNB) – Obstetrician & Gynaecologist

Early detection saves lives.

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