• J. Am. Coll. Surg. · Apr 2021

    The Ability to Look: Management of Breast Disease in the Democratic Republic of the Congo Using Smart Ultrasound Technology.

    • Ronda Henry-Tillman, Mathew Kabongo, Jonathan Laryea, Leeya Pinder, Rebecca Bittenbinder, Geoffrey Osgood, Maya Hicks, Michael Hicks, and Groesbeck Parham.
    • University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences, Department of Surgery, Winthrop P Rockefeller Cancer Institute, Little Rock, AR. Electronic address: henryrondas@uams.edu.
    • J. Am. Coll. Surg. 2021 Apr 1; 232 (4): 636-640.

    BackgroundThe vast majority of women with breast cancer in sub-Saharan Africa present with advanced stage disease, due primarily to the lack of opportunities for early detection and treatment. As part of a larger effort to increase access to diagnostic and therapeutic services for women's cancers in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), we implemented a curriculum to train the local workforce and a program to build the supportive infrastructure for the diagnosis and treatment of breast cancer at a private sector health facility (Biamba Marie Mutombo Hospital) in Kinshasa.Study DesignAfter onsite trainings in the DRC by a US breast surgeon (RT), Congolese surgeons, general physicians, physician assistants, and nurses used the Phillips Lumify smart-phone ultrasound device to perform and interpret the results of whole breast ultrasound on symptomatic women. Surgeons were trained to perform ultrasound-guided core needle biopsy on those who met the criteria for tissue diagnosis, after which they trained nurses to do the same.ResultsOver 3 years, 5,211 patients were identified as having a breast abnormality on clinical breast examination. Ultrasound abnormalities were noted in 1,493 (27%) patients, of which 632 (42%) met the criteria for ultrasound-guided core needle biopsy or fine needle aspiration. Pathology reports were available on 368 (58%) patients who underwent biopsy, of which 164 were malignant and 204 benign.ConclusionsWe demonstrated how the "ability to look" using smart technology can be successfully used to augment clinical breast exam and triage patients for biopsy in a resource-constrained African setting.Copyright © 2020 American College of Surgeons. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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