Abstract

Cervical cancer accounts for 23% of cancer incidence and 22% of cancer mortality among women in Burkina Faso. These proportions are more than 2 and 5 times higher than those of developed countries, respectively. Before 2010, cervical cancer prevention (CECAP) services in Burkina Faso were limited to temporary screening campaigns. Between September 2010 and August 2014, program implementers collaborated with the Ministry of Health and professional associations to implement a CECAP program focused on coupling visual inspection with acetic acid (VIA) for screening with same-day cryotherapy treatment for eligible women in 14 facilities. Women with larger lesions or lesions suspect for cancer were referred for loop electrosurgical excision procedure (LEEP). The program trained providers, raised awareness through demand generation activities, and strengthened monitoring capacity. Data on program activities, service provision, and programmatic lessons were analyzed. Three data collection tools, an individual client form, a client registry, and a monthly summary sheet, were used to track 3 key CECAP service indicators: number of women screened using VIA, proportion of women who screened VIA positive, and proportion of women screening VIA positive who received same-day cryotherapy. Over 4 years, the program screened 13,999 women for cervical cancer using VIA; 8.9% screened positive; and 65.9% received cryotherapy in a single visit. The proportion receiving cryotherapy on the same day started at a high of 82% to 93% when services were provided free of charge, but dropped to 51% when a user fee of $10 was applied to cover the cost of supplies. After reducing the fee to $4 in November 2012, the proportion increased again to 78%. Implementation challenges included difficulties tracking referred patients, stock-outs of key supplies, difficulties with machine maintenance, and prohibitive user fees. Providers were trained to independently monitor services, identify gaps, and take corrective actions. Following dissemination of the results that demonstrated the acceptability and feasibility of the CECAP program, the Burkina Faso Ministry of Health included CECAP services in its minimum service delivery package in 2016. Essential components for such programs include provider training on VIA, cryotherapy, and LEEP; provider and patient demand generation; local equipment maintenance; consistent supply stocks; referral system for LEEP; non-prohibitive fees; and a monitoring data collection system.

Highlights

  • Cervical cancer accounts for 23% of cancer incidence and 22% of cancer mortality among women in Burkina Faso

  • Visual inspection with diluted acetic acid (VIA) coupled with cryotherapy treatment for precancerous lesions is recommended by the World Health Organization (WHO)[6] as an alternative, low-cost screening and treatment method

  • We describe the implementation of an integrated cervical cancer prevention (CECAP) program in 14 health facilities, the challenges encountered, how they were overcome, and the outcomes of the program in the 2 teaching hospitals

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Summary

Introduction

Cervical cancer accounts for 23% of cancer incidence and 22% of cancer mortality among women in Burkina Faso. Few skilled professionals are trained for cytology-based cervical cancer screening and surgical treatment of lesions, and the resources to sustain these costly services are absent.[2] Highly sensitive diagnostic and treatment tools including human papilloma virus testing and thermal coagulation require advanced health infrastructure and remain costly and vulnerable to loss of patients to follow-up.[3,4,5] Visual inspection with diluted acetic acid (VIA) coupled with cryotherapy treatment for precancerous lesions is recommended by the World Health Organization (WHO)[6] as an alternative, low-cost screening and treatment method This single-visit approach (SVA) requires minimal infrastructure and can be practiced by nonphysician health care providers following targeted training.[2,7,8] In Burkina Faso, the Ministry of Health (MOH), professional associations, and various organizations have organized cervical cancer screening campaigns using VIA since the mid2000s. Treatment for precancerous lesions, including cryotherapy, had remained unavailable, leaving Burkina Faso's 1.7 million women ages 30–59 years without access to secondary prevention of cervical cancer.[9,10]

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