Abstract
BACKGROUND: Effective triage of women testing positive for high-risk HPV DNA is essential to reduce unnecessary colposcopies while preserving cancer prevention. Cytology, the current standard, has limited specificity and reproducibility. The genotype-specific 7-type HPV E6/E7 mRNA test (PreTect HPV-Proofer'7), targeting HPV types 16, 18, 31, 33, 45, 52, and 58, detects transcriptionally active infections and may enhance risk stratification. METHODS: Between 2019 and 2023, 34,721 women aged 25-69 underwent primary HPV DNA screening with the Cobas 4800 assay at the University Hospital of North Norway, within the national screening program. Of these, 1896 HPV DNA-positive women were triaged with liquid-based cytology with atypical squamous cells of undetermined significance or worse (≥ASC-US) and the 7-type HPV mRNA test. Histological outcomes were followed through October 2024. Diagnostic performance for CIN2+ was evaluated overall and by genotype. RESULTS: CIN2+ prevalence was 13.3%. The mRNA test reduced test positivity from 50.3% to 33.4% while maintaining comparable sensitivity (70.6% vs. 72.2%) and improving specificity (72.3% vs. 53.0%) and PPV (28.1% vs. 19.1%). Genotype-specific PPVs were highest for HPV16 mRNA (47.7%), followed by HPV33 (39.2%) and HPV31 (32.2%), all exceeding corresponding DNA-based estimates. CONCLUSION: Genotype-specific HPV mRNA triage offers superior risk discrimination compared to cytology, supporting more targeted, efficient, and accessible cervical cancer screening.