Abstract

Introduction: Mammography screening has been shown to improve early breast cancer (BC) detection, by shifting the disease at diagnosis to locally confined stages, offering lighter treatments and better prognoses. BC awareness campaigns calling for annual mammography screenings have been ongoing in Lebanon since 2002. Changes in BC staging at diagnosis as a consequence of documented improvements in mammography uptake remain to be described.Materials and Methods: We reviewed 2,822 BC cases identified by pathology reports in the American University of Beirut Medical Center between the years 1990 and 2015. After age stratification, we have trended the extracted stages versus time. Results were compared between the prescreening (1990–2001) and the postscreening period (2002–2015).Results: During the postscreening period, stage I represented 31%, stage II 47%, stage III 14%, and stage IV 8% of the cases. Stage I cases had more than doubled whereas stage III cases showed a mirror decrease compared with the years before the implementation of awareness campaigns. The increase in stage I was significantly more prominent in women aged 40 years and older (from 14% to 32%), compared with the younger group. Shifts in staging happened in parallel with a concurrent rise in reported uptake of mammography screening.Conclusions: Our findings demonstrate significant trends in earlier detection, which are likely associated with an increase in screening uptake and an awareness of BC as a public health issue. Staging data from hospitals all over Lebanon should be available for building national evidence. The Ministry of Public Health should require reporting of BC stage at diagnosis to the National Cancer Registry, as part of the annual cancer incidence reporting in Lebanon.

Highlights

  • Mammography screening has been shown to improve early breast cancer (BC) detection, by shifting the disease at diagnosis to locally confined stages, offering lighter treatments and better prognoses

  • Materials and Methods: We reviewed 2,822 BC cases identified by pathology reports in the American University of Beirut Medical Center between the years 1990 and 2015

  • Outcomes were stratified by age at diagnosis, and they were divided in two age groups, based on the recommended age for initiation of mammography in Lebanon: Materials and Methods Study design and data sources This historical correlational description draws data from de-identified hospital records of all cases of Lebanese female BC cases having received positive pathology results at American University of Beirut Medical Center (AUBMC) from 2000 to 2015

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Summary

Introduction

Mammography screening has been shown to improve early breast cancer (BC) detection, by shifting the disease at diagnosis to locally confined stages, offering lighter treatments and better prognoses. Shifts in staging happened in parallel with a concurrent rise in reported uptake of mammography screening. The Ministry of Public Health should require reporting of BC stage at diagnosis to the National Cancer Registry, as part of the annual cancer incidence reporting in Lebanon. Recent Lebanese BC data provided by the National Cancer Registry (NCR) indicated that in 2014, 2,528 new cases of primary BC were reported for all ages, accounting for. 38% of all female cancers, and yielding an agestandardized IR of about 108.2 cases per 100,000.3 The median age at diagnosis among Lebanese women with BC has consistently been lower compared with Western countries.

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