FRANKLIN
LAKES, N.J., May 15, 2024
/PRNewswire/ -- BD (Becton, Dickinson and Company) (NYSE: BDX), a
leading global medical technology company, today announced U.S.
Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approval for the use of
self-collected vaginal specimens for human papillomavirus (HPV)
testing when cervical specimens cannot otherwise be obtained. The
approval allows women to self-collect vaginal specimens for HPV
testing in a health care setting, which could include
non-traditional locations such as a retail pharmacy or mobile
clinic.
HPV is the cause of virtually all cervical cancer, and HPV
testing is the preferred screening method by the American Cancer
Society in the United States. The
BD Onclarity™ HPV Assay is FDA-approved for HPV primary testing
without the need for a traditional Pap smear performed with a
speculum. This new approval of self-collected samples opens the
door to a less invasive testing option, and it improves access to
testing for individuals who face barriers to cervical cancer
screening.
"Many patients are uncomfortable with the intimate nature of a
pelvic exam," said Dr. Jeff Andrews,
board-certified gynecologist and vice president of Global Medical
Affairs for Diagnostic Solutions at BD. "Also, many people live in
areas without a local doctor or clinician trained to obtain a
sample with a speculum. The option to self-collect in a clinical
setting can help women overcome some of these barriers."
Cervical Cancer is Preventable
Cervical cancer is
preventable, and screening plays a crucial role in early detection
and prevention. According to the American Cancer Society,
approximately 50% of cervical cancer diagnoses are in
never-screened people, and 10% of diagnoses occurs in
under-screened individuals. In addition, 25% of women in the U.S.
do not receive regular cervical cancer screening, according to the
National Cancer Institute.
Various factors contribute to inadequate screening, including
physical and geographic inaccessibility, financial insecurity
(including lack of health insurance coverage), lack of awareness
about the importance of screening, social or religious preferences,
physical disability, medical conditions, or history of sexual,
physical or psychological abuse that may make a pelvic examination
for sample collection by a clinician traumatizing.
Self-Collection Improves Access
Self-collection can
improve cervical cancer screening access, especially in underserved
populations. In the U.S., Black, Hispanic and American Indian women
have higher rates of cervical cancer than women of other racial
groups, with Black women having the highest rate of death. With
vaginal self-collection as an option for cervical cancer screening,
women are more inclined to participate in such care — with
never-screened women demonstrating a more than two-fold increase in
acceptance and participation — allowing health care providers an
alternative option to identify a high-risk HPV infection in more
convenient care settings.1 2
The National Cancer Institute (NCI), part of the National
Institutes of Health (NIH), has been working with BD in a
public-private partnership called the Cervical Cancer "Last Mile"
Initiative to address disparities in cervical cancer screening. As
part of this initiative, BD will be a participant in the
Self-collection of HPV testing to Improve Cervical Cancer
Prevention (SHIP) trial, which will begin enrolling this summer, to
evaluate accuracy of self-collection for HPV testing both in health
care and other settings, including at home.
Some HPV Strains Carry a Higher
Risk than Others
There are many strains (genotypes)
of HPV viruses, with some strains posing a much higher risk for
causing precancer and cancer than others. BD Onclarity™ is the
first FDA-approved assay that reports six HPV strains individually,
providing a more precise, accurate way to measure a women's risk
for developing cervical precancer by showing results for an
extended set of individual HPV strains and enabling those strains
to be tracked over time. Most clinically validated tests report
multiple strains in a single pooled result that prohibits
monitoring of specific strains over time, which is an important
determinant of cervical cancer risk in women who test positive for
HPV.
"The integration of self-collection with testing for
individualized strains of HPV represents a significant advancement
in cervical cancer screening," said Dr. Shieva Ghofrany, a practicing OB-GYN and Fellow
of the American Congress of Obstetricians and Gynecologists.
"Self-collection provides greater access to testing and BD
Onclarity™ allows health care providers to determine the specific
HPV strains present in the samples and more precisely identify and
treat individuals at high-risk and avoid unnecessary treatments for
women at low risk."
About BD
BD is one of the largest global medical
technology companies in the world and is advancing the world of
health by improving medical discovery, diagnostics and the delivery
of care. The company supports the heroes on the frontlines of
health care by developing innovative technology, services and
solutions that help advance both clinical therapy for patients and
clinical process for health care providers. BD and its more than
70,000 employees have a passion and commitment to help enhance the
safety and efficiency of clinicians' care delivery process, enable
laboratory scientists to accurately detect disease and advance
researchers' capabilities to develop the next generation of
diagnostics and therapeutics. BD has a presence in virtually every
country and partners with organizations around the world to address
some of the most challenging global health issues. By working in
close collaboration with customers, BD can help enhance outcomes,
lower costs, increase efficiencies, improve safety and expand
access to health care. For more information on BD, please visit
bd.com or connect with us on LinkedIn at
www.linkedin.com/company/bd1/, X (formerly Twitter) @BDandCo or
Instagram @becton_dickinson.
Contacts:
Media:
|
Investors:
|
Troy
Kirkpatrick
|
Adam Reiffe
|
VP, Public
Relations
|
Sr. Director, Investor
Relations
|
858.617.2361
|
201.847.6927
|
troy.kirkpatrick@bd.com
|
adam.reiffe@bd.com
|
1 MacDonald EJ, Geller S, Sibanda N, et al.
Reaching under–screened/never–screened indigenous peoples with
human papilloma virus self–testing: A community–based cluster
randomised controlled trial.
2 Australian and New Zealand Journal of Obstetrics
and Gynaecology. 2020;61(1):135-141.
doi:https://doi.org/10.1111/ajo.13285
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SOURCE BD (Becton, Dickinson and Company)