PRACTICE CHANGER
Put lubricating gel, not water, on the speculum every time you do a pelvic exam.1
STRENGTH OF RECOMMENDATION
B: Based on one good-quality, randomized controlled trial.
Hill DA, Lamvu G. Effect of lubricating gel on patient comfort during vaginal speculum examination. Obstet Gynecol. 2012;119 (2 pt 1):
227-231.
ILLUSTRATIVE CASE
A 24-year-old woman presents for an annual exam, including Pap smear and testing for sexually transmitted diseases. She tells you how painful her previous speculum exam was and how worried she is about having another. To ease her discomfort, should you apply lubricating gel or water to the speculum before vaginal insertion?
Physiology teaches us that vaginal entry requires lubrication. But traditional teaching has held that lubricating gel on a speculum can interfere with the results of a Pap smear and chlamydia tesing.2 Pelvic exams performed without lubricating gel on the speculum can cause significant discomfort—possibly bad enough to prevent some women from undergoing the recommended screening tests.3
Until now, we’ve only evaluated gel’s impact on test results
Studies comparing lubricating gel and water have conclusively shown that a small amount of gel, used on the outside of the speculum blades, does not interfere with either Pap testing or detection of Chlamydia trachomatis.4,5 One liquid-based cytology manufacturer, however, discourages the use of lubricants with “carbomers” or “carbopol polymers,” but states that water-based lubricants have not been shown to interfere with Pap smear results.6 No studies have evaluated lubricants from a patient perspective—until now.
STUDY SUMMARY
Lubricating gel eases discomfort
The study by Hill and Lamvu1 was a six-month, single-blind, randomized trial of women ages 18 to 50 who sought care at an Orlando obstetrics and gynecology department for conditions requiring vaginal speculum examination.1 The study excluded women who might have an altered perception of pain during speculum insertion: those who were menopausal, pregnant, or within six weeks’ postpartum; had dyspareunia, vaginitis, vulvar pain, or vulvar lesions; were undergoing a procedure; or had never had vaginal intercourse. Women who were not fluent in English were excluded, as well.
The study included 120 women who underwent computer-generated randomization into two groups with no marked differences in demographics. A single examiner performed all the speculum exams, using a standard protocol with a medium-size Graves speculum. The examiner applied 0.3 mL water-based lubricating gel to the speculum before insertion for the women in one group, and used 3 mL water for the other.
Immediately after the speculum was inserted and opened—before the examiner attempted to visualize the cervix—patients were given a visual analog scale and told to indicate the level of pain with insertion, using a scale of 0 (no pain) to 10 (the worst pain imaginable). The gel group had lower pain scores for speculum insertion compared with the water group (1.41 ± 1.55 vs 2.15 ± 1.93), a statistically significant difference of 0.74. Twenty of the 59 patients in the gel group (33.9%) rated their pain as 0, compared with six of 60 (10%) in the water group.
Although pain, rather than sampling quality, was the primary outcome of the study, the authors also reported that all of the women who underwent Pap screening (73) had adequate cytology.
WHAT’S NEW?
It’s time for lubrication to become standard practice
This trial is the first to study speculum lubrication from this patient-oriented outcome and to show that women experience less pain when lubricating gel, rather than water, is applied to the speculum. This knowledge, combined with previous studies showing that a small amount of water-based lubricating gel does not interfere with liquid-based cytology or chlamydia test results, should make the use of lubricating gel standard practice when performing speculum examinations.
CAVEATS
We see no downside
The exclusion criteria of this study were meant to eliminate women who had an altered perception of pain that could skew study results. Yet those who met the exclusion criteria may also benefit from a pelvic exam with gel lubrication. We see no harm in trying a small amount of lubricant when examining them, as well.
In addition, the study did not compare various types and sizes of specula. However, we see no reason why the benefit of a gel lubricant would be limited to the type of speculum used by the examiner.
Studies in emergency departments that have used visual analog scales to measure interventions that decrease pain have used a mean difference of 0.9 as “clinically meaningful.” 7,8 The 0.74 difference observed in this study does not rise to that level. However, one in three patients in the gel group marked 0 on the pain scale, indicating that they had no pain, compared with only one in 10 in the water group.