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In 2013, the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force (USPSTF) recommended that most women only need cervical cancer screenings every three years after evidence indicated no added benefit to annual screenings. This change is supported by a broad coalition of medical specialty societies, including the American Cancer Society, the American College of Physicians and the American Congress of Obstetrics and Gynecology.
Starting in January 2017, all Octave Blue Cross and Blue Shield members will need to follow the new cervical screening guidelines, unless noted below.
Age | Recommendation/ benefit |
---|---|
Under 21 | No screening |
21 - 65 | Pap test every three years |
30 - 65 | Pap test every three years OR Pap test and co-testing for HPV every five years |
65 and older | No screening |
If you have had a hysterectomy with removal of cervix for a benign (noncancerous) disease, a Pap test is not necessary. |
These recommendations do not apply to women who:
In these situations the test would be considered diagnostic and would not be covered under preventive services.
Pap tests detect abnormal cells in a woman’s cervix before they become cancerous. Part of the test may include a human papillomavirus (HPV) DNA test to identify high-risk forms of HPV that cause cervical cancer. Women vaccinated for HPV still need cervical cancer screenings because the vaccines do not protect against all cervical cancers.
Absolutely. There is no treatment for HPV infections except time; the body clears up most HPV infections in eight to 24 months, so more frequent screenings would not help eradicate an infection.
The real concern is cervical cancer, which can take 10 to 12 years to develop. This means regular screenings according to the new schedule allow for ample time to detect abnormalities.
Our coverage policy regarding these screenings changed on January 1, 2016, and our coverage will change on January 1, 2017.
If you are between the ages of 21-65 and received a Pap test as a screening service in 2015, you will not have 100 percent preventive coverage of another screening until three years have passed. If a doctor thinks a test is needed for health reasons, it will be covered as a diagnostic test (not a screening), which may require a copayment. If you had a Pap test last year you won’t have coverage for screening purposes for three years from the time of your last screening.
Many doctors began switching patients to this schedule in 2013 when the recommendation was announced by the USPSTF. Octave Blue Cross reviewed the information from the USPSTF thoroughly before determining that our coverage policy should reflect the recommendation.
Cervical cancer can take 10 to 12 years to develop. This testing schedule allows for early detection and minimizes unnecessary tests. In more than 90 percent of women with HPV, the infection will clear up on its own over eight to 24 months.
Screening women too young, too frequently or beyond a certain age does not improve the prevention of cervical cancer. Too many screenings exposes women who have an average risk and are without symptoms to the recognized harms of inappropriate screening:
The USPSTF is an independent, volunteer panel of national experts that make evidence-based recommendations about clinical preventive services such as screenings, counseling services and preventive medications. Visit uspreventiveservicestaskforce.org for more information.