Inventory and needs assessment in francophone LMICs for education, screening and optimal management of breast cancer. The ELISA study - 06/03/26
, Luc Ceugnart 3, Fatima Zahra Bellefkih 1, Charlotte Ngo 4, Marie-Pierre Chauvet 5, Kamel Debbi 1, 2Summary |
Introduction |
Breast cancer management in francophone Low- and Middle-Income Countries (LMICs) faces critical challenges due to limited diagnostic and therapeutic resources. The ELISA Project conducted a comprehensive needs assessment to identify priority interventions for improving care in these regions.
Methods |
A structured web-based questionnaire was completed by 105 oncology practitioners across 13 francophone LMICs, including 76 from North Africa and 29 from Sub-Saharan Africa. The survey quantitatively assessed availability and barriers across the cancer care continuum, from screening to treatment. Responses were analyzed using descriptive statistics.
Results |
The study revealed profound systemic gaps in breast cancer services. Organized screening programs were reported by only 25% of respondents as being available in their country. Advanced diagnostic capabilities were severely limited, with 70–80% of respondents reporting inadequate access to MRI and prolonged pathology turnaround times of 4–8 weeks. Radiotherapy services were particularly deficient, described as poor by 73% of participants, with fewer than 15% having capacity for modern techniques like intensity-modulated radiotherapy (IMRT). Novel targeted therapies such as CDK4/6 inhibitors were reported as adequately available by only 15% of respondents. Crucially, 80% of healthcare providers identified enhanced training programs and strengthened multidisciplinary collaboration as fundamental requirements for service improvement.
Discussion |
These findings expose critical inequities in breast cancer care capacity across francophone LMICs, characterized by infrastructure limitations and financial barriers. The results underscore the urgent need for context-appropriate solutions including screening program development, strategic equipment investments, and international training initiatives to reduce disparities in cancer outcomes.
Le texte complet de cet article est disponible en PDF.Keywords : Breast cancer, Low- and middle-income countries, Healthcare disparities, Multidisciplinary collaboration, Medical education
Plan
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