Three‐year survival of breast cancer patients attending a one‐stop breast care clinic nested within a primary care health facility in sub‐Saharan Africa‐Zambia

Author:

Songiso Mutumba12ORCID,Nuñez Olivier3ORCID,Cabanes Anna4,Mutale Mpimpa5,Munalula Jabulani6,Pupwe George7,Henry‐Tillman Ronda8,Parham Groesbeck P.9

Affiliation:

1. Department of Surgery Levy Mwanawasa University Teaching Hospital Lusaka Zambia

2. Department of Surgery Levy Mwanawasa Medical University Lusaka Zambia

3. Centro Nacional de Epidemiology National Center of Epidemiology (Pab,12) Instituto de Salud Carlos III Madrid Spain

4. Division of Research and Advocacy Global Focus on Cancer New York New York USA

5. Department of Physiological Sciences University of Lusaka Lusaka Zambia

6. Department of Surgery Medland Hospital Lusaka Zambia

7. Department of radiation and clinical oncology Cancer Diseases Hospital Lusaka Zambia

8. Department of Surgery University of Arkansas for Medical Science Little Rock Arkansas USA

9. Department of Gynaecology University Teaching Hospital, Women and Newborn Hospital Lusaka Zambia

Abstract

AbstractIn Zambia, women with breast symptoms travel through multiple levels of the healthcare system before obtaining a definitive diagnosis. To eradicate this critical barrier to care, we nested a novel breast specialty service platform inside a large public‐sector primary healthcare facility in Lusaka, Zambia to offer clinical breast examination, breast ultrasound, and ultrasound‐guided core needle biopsy in a one‐stop format, tightly linked to referral for treatment. The objective of the study was to determine the life expectancy and survival outcomes of a prospective cohort of women diagnosed with breast cancer who were attended to and followed up at the clinic. The effect of breast cancer stage on prognosis was determined by estimating stage‐specific crude survival using the Kaplan–Meier method. Survival analysis was used to estimate mean lifespan according to age and stage at diagnosis. We enrolled 302 women with histologically confirmed breast cancer. The overall 3‐year survival was 73%. An increase in patients presenting with early breast cancer and improvements in their survival were observed. Women with early‐stage breast cancer had a lifespan similar to the general population, while loss of life expectancy was significant at more advanced stages of disease. Our findings suggest that implementing efficient breast care services at the primary care level can avert a substantial proportion of breast cancer‐related deaths. The mitigating factor appears to be stage of disease at the time of diagnosis, the cause of which is multifactorial, with the most influential being delays in the referral process.

Funder

Fogarty International Center

National Cancer Institute

Publisher

Wiley

Reference22 articles.

1. Global Cancer Statistics 2020: GLOBOCAN Estimates of Incidence and Mortality Worldwide for 36 Cancers in 185 Countries

2. World Health Organization.WHO Position Paper on Mammography Screening. 2014. Accessed December 2022.https://apps.who.int/iris/handle/10665/137339

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