Abstract 334P
Background
Compared to global figures, breast cancer mortality to incidence ratio is worst in Sub Saharan Africa where about 80% of patients present with locally advanced and metastatic disease at diagnosis. In Cameroon, breast cancer is the commonest cancer with 4,170 cases recorded each year constituting 20.1% of all cancers diagnosed. Late disease presentation is attributed to poor awareness, absence of organized early detection programs, and inadequate facilities for accurate and timely diagnosis and treatment. Our objective was to investigate the role that nurses involved in cervical cancer screening/prevention can play in early detection of breast cancer in Cameroon.
Methods
The nurses involved in cervical cancer screening/prevention in a large faith-based healthcare organization called the Cameroon Baptist Convention Health Services (CBCHS) were trained to do clinical breast exams (CBE) for women aged 21 years and over, and also trained on breast tissue collection for pathology processing and examination. Clients with abnormal breast findings were provided Fine Needle Aspirations (FNA), TruCut biopsies or referred for ultrasound and/or mammography depending on the clinical presentation.
Results
Between January 2020 and December 2022, a total of 16,038 women age range (14-99) years were provided CBE with a mean and median age of 40.4 and 39, respectively. Among these, 750 (4.7%) had abnormal findings. Among those with abnormal findings, 397(52.9%) had breast masses for which 213 (53.7%) had TruCut biopsies and FNA and the others were either referred or had previously established diagnosis. From the 213 Tru-Cut biopsies and FNA’s done, 76 (35.7%) showed a pathology diagnosis of invasive breast cancer while the others showed: acute mastitis 3 (2.9%), fibroadenoma 25 (11.7%), benign mass 83 (39.0%), non-diagnostic 12 (5.6%) and other diagnosis 19 (8.9%).
Conclusions
Nurses can play a key role in early detection of breast cancer if they are trained, and this can greatly reduce the number of women seen with late stage disease and also reduce mortality rates.
Clinical trial identification
Editorial acknowledgement
Legal entity responsible for the study
The authors.
Funding
Has not received any funding.
Disclosure
All authors have declared no conflicts of interest.
Resources from the same session
313P - Intrinsic subtypes in a cohort of early breast cancer patients
Presenter: Theresa Bracht
Session: Poster session 02
314P - Concordance of somatic variants between circulating tumor DNA and tissue in patients with breast cancer
Presenter: Kangsu Shin
Session: Poster session 02
315P - Multinational survey study assessing genetic testing and counselling among patients (pts) with breast cancer (MAGENTA): Results on perceptions on testing
Presenter: Sarah Powell
Session: Poster session 02
316P - Comprehensive characterization of the HER2-enriched intrinsic molecular subtype in ER-positive HER2-negative breast cancer
Presenter: Lennart Hohmann
Session: Poster session 02
317P - Awareness of genomic testing among patients with breast cancer in Europe
Presenter: Antonella Cardone
Session: Poster session 02
318P - Evaluation of novel diagnostic kits using the semi-dry dot-blot method combined for detecting metastases in sentinel lymph nodes of patients with breast cancer: A multi-center prospective study
Presenter: Ryota Otsubo
Session: Poster session 02
319P - The impact of low HER2 expression on clinical significances and outcomes in patients with HER2-negative early breast cancer
Presenter: Yumiko Koi
Session: Poster session 02
320P - Clinical and pathological characteristics of breast cancers switching from early luminal-like to metastatic triple-negative phenotype
Presenter: Mariia Ivanova
Session: Poster session 02
321P - Non-BRCA variants in hereditary breast and ovarian cancer patients in the northern Mexico population
Presenter: Dione Aguilar
Session: Poster session 02
322P - Clinicopathological characteristics and genomic profiling of pure mucinous breast cancer
Presenter: Shusen Wang
Session: Poster session 02