breast cancer in the americas: closing divides through
TRANSCRIPT
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Dr. Felicia Marie KnaulMiami Institute for Advanced Study of the Americas and Miller School of Medicine,
University of Miami; Fundación Mexicana para la Salud; Tómatelo a Pecho
Breast Cancer in the Americas: Closing Divides
through Systemic Innovation & Advocacy
This presentation is the intellectual property of the presenter. Contact: [email protected] for permission to reprint and/or distribute.
Estrategias para reducir el cáncer de mama en las Américas:
Organización Panamericana de la Salud/Organización Mundial de la Salud (OPS/OMS),
la Unión Latinoamericana Contra el Cáncer de la Mujer(ULACCAM)
y Tómatelo a Pecho, A.C.
October 29, 2018
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Closing breast cancer divides
is an achievable
health, equity & economic imperative.
Synergistic strategies combining
advocacy and empowerment of women,
with universal health coverage platforms
need to be
developed, implemented and evaluated.
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Enero, 2008Junio, 2007
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PRESIDENCIA 2016-18
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Outline
1. Growing health
priority for LAC 2. Meeting the challenge: Integrating breast
cancer into Universal Health Coverage
3. UHC: Examples from Mexico
4. Monitoring progress to close divides
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Breast Cancer:
Incidence and mortalityLAC and Global, Globocan, 2018
Annual Daily Hourly How often
IncidenceLAC 199,734 547 23 3 min.
Global 2,088,849 5,722 238 15 sec.
MortalityLAC 52,558 106 4 15 min.
Global 626,679 1453 61 1 min.
Fuente: Globocan 2018.
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Fuente: Estimaciones propias con base en Globocan 2018.
In Latin America, Breast cancer is….
The most common cancer of women
The 5th most common cancer overall
186,000 new cases each year
14% of all new cancer cases
47,000 deaths per year
The 3rd most common cause of death in
women aged 15-69
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Source: Own estimates based on Globocan 2018 & Knaul, F. M.,
Arreola-Ornelas, H., Rodriguez, N. M., et al., (2018).
Avoidable Mortality: The Core of the Global Cancer
Divide. JGO, 4, 1-12.
The Opportunity to Survive is,
but should not be, defined by income.
Avoidable breast
cancer deaths, 2106
Latin America
and the
Caribbean
55%
27,000
Low and
middle
income
countries
64%
220,000
Inequality gap in survival:
Lethality (mort/incidence)
Low income
countries
Lower middle
income
Upper middle
income
High income
countries
0
20
40
60
Haiti
Jamaica
Peru
Trinidad &
Tobago
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Trends in breast cancer mortality rates: USA,
Canada, Brazil, Costa Rica, Mexico, ColombiaA
ge
-ad
jus
ted
mo
rta
lity
ra
te
Source: Data extracted from CI5plus.
0
5
10
15
20
25
1955196019651970197519801985199019952000200520102013
Canada
USA
Costa Rica Brazil
MexicoColombia
¿2030?
USA, Canada --35%:
Awareness, Earlier detection
and Better treatment
1955 1970 1985 2000 2013
México 2030?:
• <19,000 muertes
• O
• +5,200 muertes
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Stage at diagnosis and survival,
Breast cancer, Women, USA% patients diagnosed at each
stage
5 – year relative survival rate for
each stage at diagnosis
61%
32%
5%
99% 84% 24%
LocalizedConfined to the organ
of origin
RegionalSpread to nearby
tissues or lymph
nodes
Distant
metastaticSpread to other
parts of the body
Source: American Cancer Society
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Breast Cancer Stage at Diagnosis:
Latin America and USA
Sources: Justo, Wilking, Johnsson, Luciani, Cazab, 2014, The Oncologist; and ACS. Facts & figures, 2015-2016.
Stage at
diagnosisLat Am USA
I 21% 80%
II-III 71% 19%
IV 7% 1%
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Source: Estimaciones de los autores basadas en IARC, Globocan 2012
In LMICs a very large % of Breast Cancer
cases and deaths are in women <55
High Income
15-39
40-54
>55
Ag
e a
t
Dia
gn
os
is
Ag
e a
t
De
ath
33%
34%
61%
61%
LAC
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Outline1. Growing health priority for LAC
2. Meeting the challenge:
Integrating breast
cancer into Universal
Health Coverage 3. UHC: Examples from Mexico
4. Monitoring progress to close divides
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Universal Health Coverage
(UHC)
All people must obtain the health services they
require - prevention, promotion, treatment,
rehabilitation and palliative care - without the risk
of impoverishment (WHO)
LAC: a wave of global reforms in the difficult context of complex
epidemiological transition, and with highly fragmented health systems
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An effective UHC response to chronic illness
must integrate interventions along the
Continuum of disease:1. Primary prevention
2. Early detection
3. Diagnosis
4. Treatment
5. Survivorship
6. Palliative care
….As well through each
Health system function
1. Stewardship
2. Financing
3. Delivery
4. Resource generation
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Breast cancer: care continuum
Primary
Prevention
Early
Detection
Diagnosis
Treatment
Survivorship
Palliative
Care
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Stage of Chronic Disease Life Cycle /components CCC
Primary
Prevention
Secondary
preventionDiagnosis Treatment
Survivorship/
Rehabilitation
Palliation/
End-of-life
care
Costa Rica
México Partially PartiallyPartially
Colombia Partially Partially
PeruPartially
X
Coverage (?) of breast cancer in select LAC
countries by care-control continuum:
complex analysis
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Outline1. Growing health priority for LAC
2. Meeting the challenge: Integrating breast
cancer into Universal Health Coverage
3. UHC: Examples
from Mexico4. Monitoring progress to close divides
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Breast cancer: care continuum
Primary
Prevention
Early
DetectionDiagnosis Treatment Survivorship
Palliative
Care
Mexico: Exemplary programs for
prevention of risk factors
and financing treatment but….
late detection, long lag time between
diagnosis and treatment, and little access
to survivorship or palliative care.
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The Economist, 2018
• “UHC is sensible, affordable and
practical even in poor countries.
Without it the potential of modern
medicine will be squandered.”
• “…cover as many as
possible…
more people but start with a
limited range of benefits….
as under
Mexico´s Seguro Popular.”
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Universal coverage by disease with an
effective package of interventions
2004/6: HIV/AIDS, cervical, ALL in kids
2007: Pediatric cancers; Breast cancer
2011+ : Testicular, Prostate, NHL,
Ovarian and Colorectal
Seguro Popular now covers more
than 56 million Mexicans and
includes cancers in the
national catastrophic illness fund
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Seguro Popular and breast cancer:
Evidence of impactAdherence to
treatment:
2005: 200/600
2010: 10/900
Human
faces of
impact:• Guillermina
• Abish
¡Cancer registry
– finally a reality!
Stay tuned.
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Breast Cancer early detection:
Delivery failure • 10-15% of cases detected in Stage I
• Poor municipalities: 50% Stage 4; 5x rate for rich
Source: Authors’ estimates with database from IMSS, 2014
50%
I II
III IV
High %
Stage IV
MarginalizedHigh Access to
basic Services
Municipalities
States
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Engage and Train primary care promoters, nurses and doctors in early detection and post-treatment
management of breast cancer: Tómatelo a Pecho
Significant increase in knowledge,
among health promoters,
especially
in clinical breast examination (Keating, Knaul et al 2014, The Oncologist)
8
7
6
5
4
3Pre Post 3-6 month
Health Promoters
Risk Score (0-10)
*
> 16,000
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Engaging CHWs in South Florida to promote early detection of
breast cancer and access to treatment for the farmworker population
– Adaption of the Mexico “train-the-trainer” models and materials
– Aim: harness the role of CHWs in promoting breast health, and
breast cancer early detection, treatment and survivorship services
South Florida: Univ. Miami
CHW Education Project
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Outline1. Growing health priority for LAC
2. Meeting the challenge: Integrating breast
cancer into Universal Health Coverage
3. UHC: Examples from Mexico
4. Monitoring progress
to close divides
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Annual monitoring of regional and country-specific
progress: comparative country performance makes it a
powerful tool for national advocacy.
Designed to provide policy-oriented data, in an instrument
that can be effectively utilized by civil society for
advocacy to promote change.
Can be readily transformed into National Observatories by
and for local advocacy groups and civil society.
Core, basic indicators from secondary data sources.
Possible addition of more complex indicators.
Evidence-based advocacy :ULACCAM Women´s Cancer Observatory –
in construction for launch in 2019
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1a) National cancer plan
...1b) updated in past 5 years
...1c) National women´s cancer specific plan
2) Integration of women´s cancer into
women´s health plans
3) A national cancer registry that includes
women´s cancer
4) An office for women´s cancer in the
Ministry of Health
5a) Offical MOH women´s cancer regulations
….5b) Updated every 5 years
6) One or more registered NGOs working on
women´s cancer
ULACCAM Regional Observatory
scorecard: examples of indicators
Does the country have….
Yes
Yes, not updated
No
No information
Has a national
cancer plan
Preliminary data
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A more complex indicator: Access to morphine for all palliative care and pain relief
Lancet Commission indicator and INCB data
% of Palliative care
need potentially met
with registered
morphine
% of All medical need
(W. Europe
benchmark)
potentially met with
registered morphine
Colombia 71 % 8 %Guatemala 26 % 3 %Mexico 36 % 4 %Panama 70 % 8 %Peru 30 % 4 %Uruguay 33 % 4 %
Latin America 33 % 4 %
Source: Lancet Commission on Palliative Care and Pain Relief and INCB data author calculations
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A more complex indicator:Trends(?) in incidence and mortality from breast cancer
in selected countries, LAC:
1 Datos basados en IHME, 2012. Representan los años mencionados.
2. Datos basados en GLOBOCAN, 2008. Representan los valores de 2005.
3. Datos basados en GLOBOCAN, 2012. Representan los valores de 2010.
4. Datos basados en GLOBOCAN, 2018. Representan los valores de 2016
Colombia Mexico Argentina Chile Trinidad and
Tobago
19801
(IHME)
Mortality 749 1499 3757 792 81
Incidence 1761 3862 9931 1,910 167
M/I 0.43 0.39 0.38 0.41 0.49
20052
(Globocan)
Mortatlity 2120 5217 5873 1248 135
Incidence 6655 13,939 18,712 4199 285
M/I 0.32 0.37 0.31 0.30 0.47
20101,3
(IHME)
Mortality 2649 5680 6163 1455 2014
Incidence 8686 20,444 19,386 4081 487
M/I 0.30 0.28 0.32 0.36 0.42
20164
(Globocan)
Mortality 3702 6884 6,380 1688 259
Incidence 13,380 27,28321,558
5,393 657
M/I 0.28 0.25 0.30 0.31 0.39
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Challenge: from survival to
survivorship
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Dr. Felicia Marie KnaulMiami Institute for Advanced Study of the Americas and Miller School of Medicine,
University of Miami; Fundación Mexicana para la Salud; Tómatelo a Pecho
Breast Cancer in the Americas: Closing Divides
through Systemic Innovation & Advocacy”
This presentation is the intellectual property of the presenter. Contact: [email protected] for permission to reprint and/or distribute.
Estrategias para reducir el cáncer de mama en las Américas:
Organización Panamericana de la Salud/Organización Mundial de la Salud (OPS/OMS),
la Unión Latinoamericana Contra el Cáncer de la Mujer(ULACCAM)
y Tómatelo a Pecho, A.C.
October 29, 2018