Examining the impact of COVID-19 disruptions on population-based breast cancer screening in Ireland

Author:

O’Driscoll Jessica1ORCID,Mooney Therese2,Kearney Paul2,Williams Yvonne3,Lynch Suzanne4,Connors Alissa4,Larke Aideen4,McNally Sorcha4,O’Doherty Ann4,Murphy Laura4,Bennett Kathleen E.1,Fitzpatrick Patricia25,Mullooly Maeve1,Flanagan Fidelma4

Affiliation:

1. School of Population Health, RCSI University of Medicine and Health Sciences, Dublin, Ireland

2. National Screening Service, Dublin, Ireland

3. Health Service Executive, Dublin, Ireland

4. BreastCheck, National Screening Service, Ireland

5. School of Public Health, Physiotherapy & Sports Science, University College Dublin, Ireland

Abstract

Objective Many population-based breast screening programmes temporarily suspended routine screening following the COVID-19 pandemic onset. This study aimed to describe screening mammography utilisation and the pattern of screen-detected breast cancer diagnoses following COVID-19-related screening disruptions in Ireland. Methods Using anonymous aggregate data from women invited for routine screening, three time periods were examined: (1) January–December 2019, (2) January–December 2020, and (3) January–December 2021. Descriptive statistics were conducted and comparisons between groups were performed using chi-square tests. Results In 2020, screening mammography capacity fell by 67.1% compared to 2019; recovering to 75% of mammograms performed in 2019, during 2021. Compared to 2019, for screen-detected invasive breast cancers, a reduction in Grade 1 (14.2% vs. 17.2%) and Grade 2 tumours (53.4% vs. 58.0%) and an increase in Grade 3 tumours (32.4% vs. 24.8%) was observed in 2020 ( p = 0.03); whereas an increase in Grade 2 tumours (63.3% vs. 58.0%) and a reduction in Grade 3 tumours (19.6% vs. 24.8%) was found in 2021 ( p = 0.02). No changes in oestrogen receptor-positive or nodal-positive diagnoses were observed; however the proportion of oestrogen/progesterone receptor-positive breast cancers significantly increased in 2020 (76.2%; p < 0.01) and 2021 (78.7%; p < 0.001) compared to 2019 (67.8%). Conclusion These findings demonstrate signs of a grade change for screen-detected invasive breast cancers early in the pandemic, with recovery evident in 2021, and without an increase in nodal positivity. Future studies are needed to determine the COVID-19 impact on long-term breast cancer outcomes including mortality.

Funder

The Health Research Board of Ireland

Publisher

SAGE Publications

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4. Nickson C, Deij S, Velentzis L. COVID-19 scenario modelling for cancer screening programs, the BreastScreen Australia Program. Cancer Council NSW. 2020. https://www.health.gov.au/sites/default/files/documents/2020/09/covid-19-scenario-modelling-for-cancer-screening-programs-the-breastscreen-australia-program.pdf.

5. The impact of episodic screening interruption: COVID-19 and population-based cancer screening in Canada

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