Vaginal vault screening
- After total hysterectomy (operation to remove uterus including cervix) — woman may need vaginal vault screening to detect changes that can lead to vaginal cancer
- After subtotal hysterectomy (operation to remove body of uterus but not cervix) — woman needs regular cervical screening every 5 years. Risk of cervical cancer is the same as women who haven't had a hysterectomy
Deciding who should have vaginal vault screening
Check
- Type of hysterectomy
- Total — may need vault smear see Flowchart 6.1
- Subtotal — cervical screening
Do
- Follow Flowchart 6.1
- First row — cervical screening history
- Second row — indication for hysterectomy
- Third row — cervical histopathology result
- Fourth row — required follow-up
Women do not need vaginal vault screening if
- Total hysterectomy for benign gynaecological disease with no cervical pathology
- AND normal cervical screening history
- OR treated HSIL with completed 'Test of Cure'
Medical/gynaecology consult about need for vaginal vault screening IF
- Hysterectomy for non-benign condition, including HSIL (CIN 2/3), adenocarcinoma-in-situ (AIS), cervical or other genital tract cancer. Ideally, talk with gynaecologist who did hysterectomy to work out best plan for each woman
- Reason for hysterectomy not known
- Cervical screening history not known
- History of abnormal cervical screening (or Pap smear) or treatment for HSIL/AIS and/or 'Test of Cure' not completed
- History of genital tract cancer, even if not main reason for hysterectomy
Flowchart 6.1 Vaginal screening after total hysterectomy
Doing vaginal vault screening
What you need
- Liquid based cytology (LBC) vial (eg Thinprep, SurePath) labelled with woman's name, date of birth
- Choice of sampling tool/s
- Cervix sampler 'broom' — preferred tool
- Plastic spatula — do not use wooden spatula
What you do
- Do speculum examination
- Find hysterectomy suture line on anterior vaginal wall — use cervix sampler or blunt end of plastic spatula to take sample from suture line
- If suture line not seen — take sample from end of vagina
- Continue as for cervical screening — see After taking sample
- Take swabs for STI tests
- If vaginal discharge — see Vaginal discharge
- 2 tests possible depending on recommended follow-up in Flowchart 6.1
- Usually 'Test of Cure' — request 'HPV+LBC co-test'
- Occasionally HPV test only — request 'HPV test'
- See Table 6.2 for more information on tests
Follow-up
- Talk to woman about coming back for results
- Medical consult about any abnormal findings
- If positive test result (HPV or LBC) — refer for colposcopy