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Pippa van Paauwe鈥檚 smear tests were incorrectly assessed as normal - in 2017, and again in 2020 - allowing cancer to develop past curability.听
She tells听Nicholas Jones听about grieving losses that haven鈥檛 yet happened - her children鈥檚 21st birthdays, being a grandparent - and her determination to protect other women relying on a disjointed and underfunded health system.听
Pippa van Paauwe was on holiday when cancer鈥檚 knock at the door became a hammer.听
She鈥檇 bled for weeks, but doctors suspected early menopause.听
November 2021 turned to December. Her young family drove from Avondale, Auckland, to her parents鈥 place in Hawke鈥檚 Bay.听
鈥淚 walked down the road and over a bridge, to go for a swim. And in that short space of time I was completely drenched in blood,鈥 says Pippa, 39.听
She kept haemorrhaging on the drive home. On arrival she messaged her GP: 鈥淚 cannot be held hostage by my body for any longer.鈥听
Pippa, who is Ng膩i Te Rangi, finally saw a specialist in February 2022. She looked to the ceiling as a biopsy was taken, and felt the room go still.听
A more senior doctor was called in.听
鈥淭he room went quiet again,鈥 Pippa says.听
鈥淪he said, 鈥榃e鈥檙e just going to get you down off the table and have a chat.鈥欌听
The cervical cancer was graded as Stage 3, and in May last year, the mother of two began radiation and chemotherapy.听
Her tumours shrank away. She didn鈥檛 suffer bad side-effects, and kept working a new job at Curative, a creative agency focused on social change.听
鈥淚 was like, 鈥極h, that was pretty easy - job done.鈥欌听
However, a few months later it became uncomfortable to sit. A new tumour had grown, and cancer had reached her groin and lungs. She was Stage 4 - incurable.听
As a trained social worker, Pippa always imagined her years working in hospice care would prepare her for such a blow.听
鈥淏ut you don鈥檛 get it at all,鈥 she says.听
鈥淚t鈥檚 all the losses that haven鈥檛 happened. You visualise being there when your kids graduate high school. What you鈥檒l say at their 21st, their wedding... being a grandparent.听
鈥淭he dumb thing is, none of us have that security. We鈥檙e so conditioned to expect that as a right - that we鈥檒l grow to be old and grey.听
鈥淏ut there鈥檚 more certainty now that I probably won鈥檛 be there for those things.鈥听
"You think about how aggressive it might continue to be," Pippa van Paauwe says of the cancer's ever-present threat. Photo / Sylvie Whinray听
鈥楴othing鈥檚 going to fix it鈥听
Pippa started palliative chemotherapy and went on the immunotherapy drug pembrolizumab (branded Keytruda).听
She鈥檇 had routine smears in 2013, 2017 and 2020, which came back as normal - unusual, because cervical cancer is usually preceded by at least 10 years of pre-cancerous abnormality.听
In April last year, her gynaecologist oncologist asked the National Cervical Screening Programme (NCSP) - part of Te Whatu Ora Health New Zealand - to recheck these results.听
The answer came back in late December: both her March 2017 and February 2020 smears were misread.听
鈥淭he penny dropped halfway through the conversation,鈥 she recalls.听
鈥溾楳y God - you never needed to be in this predicament. And nothing is going to fix it.鈥欌听
Her specialist lodged an ACC claim, writing that the 2017 and 2020 smears 鈥渨ere misclassified and would have warranted intervention [that] would have picked up the cancer potentially at a precancerous stage, or a much earlier stage鈥.听
鈥淭his injury/missed diagnosis has significantly limited her life expectancy to 12 to 18 months... she has two young children.鈥听
Pippa couldn鈥檛 fathom how such a devastating mistake happened, twice in a row.听
A friend offered to investigate. As sixth formers, she and Elizabeth Heaney bonded in drama class, and oscillated in and out of each others鈥 adult lives, snatching time to catch up amidst busy careers - Heaney as a litigation lawyer - and being parents.听
Heaney鈥檚 contact book included Antonia Fisher, KC, who, decades earlier, represented 鈥淧atient A鈥, the woman who sued Gisborne pathologist Dr Michael Bottrill after he misread her smears between 1990-1994.听
听eventually found Bottrill misread nearly 2000 slides. Dozens of women developed cancer, and some died.听
More than 20 years later, Fisher (who with Heaney is acting for Pippa for free) contacted Dr Margaret Sage, the NCSP鈥檚 clinical lead for pathology.听
The programme began an investigation, as did Te Toka Tumai Auckland (formerly Auckland DHB), which contracts the lab at fault, the Anatomic Pathology Service (APS).听
ACC got expert opinion from Associate Professor Peter Sykes, a gynaecological oncologist, and pathologist Dr Cynric Temple-Camp. Both agreed with the NCSP assessment (done by Sage) that Pippa鈥檚 2017 and 2020 smears were misread.听
The organisation, however, wanted to account for hindsight bias - overestimating one鈥檚 ability to have foreseen an outcome.听
It ordered a blinded review - Pippa鈥檚 slides were disguised among 40 from other women, and screened by three other technicians.听
Pippa learnt of this extra hurdle on March 24, months after her claim went in.听
The delay mattered. Her pembrolizumab isn鈥檛 government-funded, and each three-week cycle costs about $1200 for the drug alone.听
Pharmaceutical giant Merck Sharp & Dohme caps the total amount Kiwi patients pay at $69,000, including GST - a threshold she reached some time ago.听
Cycles (she鈥檒l remain on the drug for two years) incur significant extra charges for administration, six-weekly specialist reviews and consultations.听
The cost is impossible for her and husband J.D., a science teacher and Dean at Liston College.听
In ACC limbo, they turned to her parents - something that causes Pippa tremendous guilt, particularly because their property in Puketapu, Hawke鈥檚 Bay, was flooded in Cyclone Gabrielle.听
鈥淭hey now have their own cashflow concerns... it鈥檚 money that could have been spent on their earned retirement. I don鈥檛 know what compromises they鈥檙e making.鈥听
Her mother, Nicola Midgley, says there was no hesitation.听
鈥淪he and J.D. were planning to mortgage their house to pay for it... even if we couldn鈥檛 have afforded it, we would have found some way to do it ourselves,鈥 she says.听
鈥淔or families who are not [able to], this must be dire. They have to set up Givealittle pages... it makes people feel really humbled, but how else do they go about it? All their life savings, and perhaps their parents鈥, go on a punt that this will give some extension of life.鈥听
In Pippa鈥檚 case, pembrolizumab appears to have been crucial - on March 6 she posted to Facebook, celebrating a C.T. scan that didn鈥檛 detect cancer.听
鈥淵ou heard me right,鈥 she wrote. 鈥淣one. Gone. Nada.鈥听
Over 100 congratulatory comments followed. Friends sent cake, champagne and flowers. She felt she鈥檇 misled people.听
鈥淲hile it is gone, it鈥檚 a sneaky f***er and will eventually make itself known again,鈥 she wrote of the disease, in an edit to the post.听
鈥淐ould be months, years or decades. No one knows. This is not what you call 鈥榬emission鈥. It鈥檚 hard to explain, but hey - for now I鈥檒l take it!鈥听
That reality sharpens moments of happiness, to the point of pain.听
鈥淭hese days feel so much more magic and special,鈥 Pippa recorded when Bea turned 7 in May. 鈥淚t made my heart warm and fuzzy and my eyes very leaky to have seen you among your friends having such a great time yesterday.鈥听
In June, it was a message for Jarvis.听
鈥淭EN. My dude. Such a vibrant guy and a special sweetness. We mentioned the next 10 years being the most exciting times. I can鈥檛 wait to see. Gawd I love you.鈥听
Pippa gets three-monthly scans, followed by 鈥渢errifying鈥 appointments to learn the results. Radiation and chemo are unlikely to be offered when cancer reappears.听
鈥淭hey鈥檝e already fried the bejesus out of those places, so it would do more damage than good,鈥 Pippa says.听
鈥淵ou think about how aggressive it might continue to be - you鈥檙e here one day, then two months later, that鈥檚 it. It鈥檚 a false sense of security at the moment, you try to live in the present but I鈥檓 such a pragmatist, I鈥檓 also trying to prepare - to do all the things I would have done in the future.听
鈥淭he day the confirmation comes, I worry that it鈥檚 not going to be long after that. It seeps into everything. Every moment - coming to Jarvis鈥 football game and thinking, 鈥業t鈥檚 end-of-season soon, am I going to be here for the next one?鈥听
鈥淪ome days you can brush it off. Other nights I鈥檒l scream into a pillow so I don鈥檛 wake the kids.鈥听
Pippa with Bea and Jarvis, then aged 3 and 6.听
Shifting to HPV testing听
About 160-180 New Zealand women are diagnosed with cervical cancer each year, and around 50 die from it.听
Those rates were much worse before the national cervical screening programme began in 1990, but progress has plateaued and, in some areas, reversed.听
Until recently, women aged 25 to 69 were encouraged to be screened every three years, but a lack of Government funding meant most had to make a 鈥渃o-payment鈥 of up to about $100.听
Three-year coverage is below the target of 80 per cent, at 68 per cent as of July. This drops for M膩ori (55 per cent), Pacific (54 per cent), and Asian (62 per cent).听
Screening has been done by a speculum examination (smear test), which collects cells from the cervix that are then analysed in contracted laboratories.听
Last week a major shift in approach began - rolling out testing for high-risk human papillomavirus (HPV), which are viruses that have the potential to infect cervical tissue.听
HPV is common. Approximately 80 per cent of adults will have an HPV infection in their lifetime, which usually resolves and clears itself within two years. However, in some cases, it persists and causes cancer.听
Under the new HPV testing programme, women can do a vaginal swab themselves, at a health centre (a clinician will take the swab if preferred), or at home. It is a better test, allowing the routine screening interval to be extended from three to five years.听
Younger New Zealanders can also be protected from cervical and other cancers through HPV immunisation.听
Pippa鈥檚 misread smears happened in the old system.听
In May, she received a letter from Dr Jane O鈥橦allahan, the clinical director of the national screening unit, giving an account of what happened.听
Her slides were pre-screened with an automated device, which finds 22 microscopic fields of view most likely to contain abnormal cells. These were then checked by the cytoscientist or cytotechnician.听
Human error, twice in a row, allowed her cancer to develop unnoticed until the bleeding began.听
Internationally, detection of high-grade lesions (cells that appear very different from normal cells) ranges from about 50 to 80 per cent for a single screening.听
鈥淭he sensitivity of screening in New Zealand laboratories is estimated to be around 70 per cent,鈥 O鈥橦allahan explained.听
鈥淲hile this sounds low, cervical cytology screening works as well as it does because there is usually a long in-situ phase (often 10-plus years) of high-grade lesions before invasive cancer develops, allowing multiple screening events where high-grade change can be detected.听
鈥淭he prediction is that regular cytology screening prevents about 90 per cent of cervical squamous cell cancers, the type of cancer that Pippa has.鈥听
The move to 鈥渉ighly sensitive鈥 HPV testing will help prevent future tragedies, O鈥橦allahan wrote.听
鈥淢issed cases will still occur but the frequency of these will be lower.鈥听
Receiving treatment in October last year.听
True partnership听
For a time, Pippa asked her oncologist to consider another patient when booking her appointments.听
J.D.鈥檚 mum, Drina, had endometrial cancer, which took her life in June.听
鈥淪he was under the same oncologist, and we asked them to schedule our appointments side-by-side, so J.D. could sit with his mum in one, and then sit with me in the other,鈥 Pippa says.听
鈥淚 can鈥檛 believe how he鈥檚 managed to cope.鈥听
Pippa spotted that strength and concern for others early. They met long before Tinder, on NZDating.com. Pippa figured J.D. was out of her league, but their bond was obvious from the first dates, including mini golf on T膩maki Drive.听
鈥淗is ability to remain focused and hopeful is something to be rivalled. We鈥檙e a true partnership - he gives and gives. Just like his mum was, he is always in service to others and he has held things down for us when I have been spiralling,鈥 she says.听
鈥淛.D. is my rock. He鈥檚 home... the thing I have really felt since all this, is how intense all the emotions feel with each other. I have always adored him, laughed with him - and felt frustrated with him too - but now when we feel these feelings, we really feel them so intensely.鈥听
Like Pippa鈥檚 parents, J.D. is more optimistic that the cancer won鈥檛 come back. He can even occasionally forget its shadow - teaching rowdy teenagers has some silver linings.听
鈥淏ut at the same time, it takes a huge amount of effort and willpower, and resilience. We both have those moments where we are just crying and contemplating the what-ifs,鈥 he says.听
That mental burden is also physical for Pippa, who has recently been in hospital with side-effects from radiation damage.听
鈥淚f you meet Pip she wouldn鈥檛 be giving too much away - how uncomfortable she might be some days. I鈥檓 so proud of her, in terms of how she鈥檚 dealing with it,鈥 J.D. says.听
鈥淚 couldn鈥檛 imagine my life without her. It is going to be... those thoughts sneak in. I try to bury them deep.鈥听
Getting married, February 13, 2010.听
Delay 鈥榤akes you cry鈥: expert听
On July 26, ACC told Pippa it was granting cover - all three of the screeners in the blinded review detected abnormality in her 2017 and 2020 slides.听
It released the expert advice from Dr Sykes.听
If the 2017 slide was accurately read, Pippa would have had a colposcopy (examination of cervix cells using a microscope), Sykes wrote. The precancerous cells or early cancer would be excised, possibly followed by a hysterectomy (removal of the uterus).听
鈥淭hese treatments are associated with a low risk of serious morbidity and a cure rate of over 90 per cent,鈥 Sykes advised.听
Pippa鈥檚 cancer would probably have been Stage 1 at the point of her 2020 smear, and treatments - including a radical hysterectomy and chemotherapy - are, overall, associated with cure rates of over 80 per cent.听
A misread smear that allows cancer to develop is devastating, but the likelihood of such a mistake 鈥渋s extremely low鈥, Sykes advised.听
However, when those tragedies do happen, there鈥檚 been no system in place to tell the women involved, an investigation into Pippa鈥檚 care by Te Toka Tumai Auckland discovered.听
Each laboratory in the cervical screening programme gets a six-monthly report of all patients diagnosed with cervical cancer or precancerous lesions, and a list of smears done in the past 3.5 years.听
They are expected to undertake a 鈥渓ook-back鈥 review for each patient.听
鈥淭his process occurs some months after the diagnosis and there is no current system that involves notification of the patient or the referring clinician,鈥 the review report found.听
鈥淐urrently, there is no systematic process in place to manage cancer cases where previous cytology slides have been reviewed and upgrades discovered.鈥听
Even after Pippa鈥檚 specialist requested a review, she was deliberately kept in the dark when the results came back on September 9.听
Days earlier, she鈥檇 learnt her cancer was back and incurable, and her radiation oncologist 鈥渄id not think that this was the right time to inform Pippa鈥, the Auckland report revealed, with their 鈥渇ocus on supporting Pippa through her palliative treatment鈥.听
She was finally told on December 29 - only then could she lodge an ACC claim.听
鈥淲hilst there has been tremendous response to immunotherapy, it has come at considerable cost because it is not publicly-funded treatment. Pippa has suffered emotionally, physically and financially as a result of both the cervical cancer diagnosis and the delay to an ACC decision,鈥 the report noted.听
From next year, the NCSP will audit all cases of cervical cancer on an ongoing basis, including reviewing smear results from the previous 3.5 years, if they were reported as normal. Women will be told of the outcome if they wish to be.听
Te Toka Tumai Auckland has requested Pippa鈥檚 case be used 鈥渁s an example of the issues that require consideration鈥 in this audit. (Pippa has also complained to the Health and Disability Commissioner, a process that can take years.)听
Misreading of smears mostly happens when abnormal cells don鈥檛 make it on to the slide, including during transfer from lesion to sample, sample to vial, and vial to slide.听
In Pippa鈥檚 case, abnormal cells weren鈥檛 spotted or were misinterpreted when her slides were examined.听
Staff at APS, the lab at fault, screen an average of about 70 cases per day, for four days per week. The cytoscientist and cytotechnician involved 鈥渨ere within the accepted sensitivity range鈥 at the time they checked Pippa鈥檚 slides, the Auckland report found.听
HPV testing should increase the overall sensitivity of screening from around 75 per cent to 95 per cent, the report stated. If high-risk HPV is detected then follow-up testing is needed, such as a smear (cytology) test, or colposcopy. Reduced demand will allow each smear to be reviewed by two scientists.听
The change to HPV testing should significantly reduce false negative results, the Auckland report stated, but not eradicate them.听
鈥淐ontinued education of smear takers and General Practitioners to highlight the limitations of the screening system remains of utmost importance.鈥听
Knowing those limitations shouldn鈥檛 put women off from being screened, stresses Pippa. Rather, it underlines the importance of doing so regularly, and not delaying an HPV test.听
Screening was to shift to HPV听听- which would have been in time to detect Pippa鈥檚 cancer in 2020 - but has been repeatedly put back.听
(鈥淒elays... will result in a significant number of otherwise-preventable cervical cancers,鈥 warned a 2018 Parliamentary听)听
Modelling for the Ministry of Health in 2016 showed HPV screening would reduce both cancer incidence and mortality by 16 per cent, if participants were largely unvaccinated - about 25 cancer cases and 10 deaths prevented every year.听
The actual impact will be much bigger, because health authorities expect giving women the option to self-test with a vaginal swab will greatly lift screening coverage.听
Professor Bev Lawton, founder and director of Victoria University鈥檚 Centre for Women鈥檚 Health Research - Te T膩tai Hauora o Hine, is part of a group of health workers, researchers, scientists and advocates who have lobbied and scrapped for the change.听
The National Government in 2016 announced the change to HPV testing from 2018, but it wasn鈥檛 ready when Labour took power in 2017, nor prioritised afterwards.听
鈥淚 think it became a political football,鈥 says Lawton, a member of the screening programme鈥檚 action and advisory group.听
鈥淲e鈥檙e angry about it. It鈥檚 unacceptable. But, really, it makes you cry.鈥听
(On the delays, Te Whatu Ora told the听Weekend Herald: 鈥淭his is a significant change and required a robust consultation, planning and development process, which began in 2014.鈥)听
Lawton (Nga虅ti Porou) says the change needs bolstering by a strategy to eliminate cervical cancer, including through lifting vaccination rates - presently at 71 per cent for the 2009 birth cohort - and making screening free.听
Currently, screening is free only for women aged 30 and older and who haven鈥檛 been tested ever or in the previous five years, M膩ori, Pasifika, and community service card holders. (Asian women recently lost this entitlement.)听
Labour last week pledged to make screening free for all women if re-elected, which will cost $20 million a year. National鈥檚 health spokesman Dr Shane Reti says the party 鈥渟upports the general direction鈥 of that policy, but wants details.听
Lawton and others are pushing for cross-party agreement before the October 14 election.听
鈥淲e do not want this left in the political wilderness again.鈥听
Professor Bev Lawton holding the HPV self-test.听
Legacy听
ACC last week reimbursed Pippa for most of her pembrolizumab costs to date. It will also fund home and childcare help, and assess her impairment to calculate a lump sum payment.听
She fears the time taken (her claim was lodged on January 10) means others who cannot self-fund medication could die awaiting a decision, or while navigating the 鈥渆ndless鈥 form-filling.听
Having legal support has been crucial, she says, even as someone who has worked in and researched the health system.听
鈥淚t feels as if they stalled with the hope I might just die, instead.鈥听
ACC鈥檚 deputy chief executive of service delivery, Amanda Malu, says Pippa鈥檚 claim 鈥渦nfortunately took longer than we had hoped鈥, but doing the blinded test 鈥済ave us the clinical information we needed鈥.听
鈥淲e recognise this was a stressful time for her and her family... we鈥檙e confident that our staff worked as quickly as they could, given the clinical information needed.鈥听
Pippa鈥檚 next scan is due in November.听
We fit interviews for this article around work and home life - J.D. cooks dinner during one, while Jarvis and Bea watch TV upstairs - and Pippa finds time to answer dozens of follow-up questions.听
鈥淚f I was sicker, I could be at ease with not doing anything. But I鈥檓 well enough at the moment that I don鈥檛 think I can live with myself if I just let it go,鈥 she says.听
鈥淚 don鈥檛 have faith-based spirituality. But part of spirituality is about having a legacy or having hope, and maybe this is a piece of legacy work for me - knowing I鈥檓 leaving behind something that鈥檚 going to help the next person.鈥听
Nicholas Jones is an investigative reporter at the听New Zealand Herald.听He won the Best Individual Investigation and Best Social Issues Reporter categories at the 2023 Voyager Media Awards.听
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