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Lydia Pace, MD, MPH

Brigham and Women’s Hospital
Boston, Massachusetts

Titles and Affiliations

Clinician researcher, Division of Women’s Health
Interim Clinical and Research Director
Lead, Global Women’s Health Fellowship
Associate Professor of Medicine, Harvard Medical School

Research area

Creating healthcare infrastructure and training health care professionals in Rwanda to ensure that previously underserved women receive quality screening and treatment for breast cancer.

Impact

Breast cancer is a major public health concern in low- and middle-income countries such as Rwanda, where women have a much higher risk of dying from their disease. This is due, in part, to delayed and late-stage diagnoses. By focusing on training and infrastructure, Drs. Pace, Shulman, and Shyirambere have developed effective strategies to integrate early detection services into the health care system in rural Rwanda and reduce time to treatment. They have trained hundreds of Rwandan health care workers in strategies to educate patients about breast cancer, perform high-quality breast exams, utilize ultrasound to identify those who may have cancer, and refer patients for timely diagnosis and treatment. Their program has provided breast exam screening to thousands of patients and expanded into four districts in the country, leading to significant improvement in patient outcomes. The team has developed a tablet-based electronic medical record, an innovative advancement that allows clinicians to share information across facilities and identify patients who have missed visits and re-engage them in care. This mobile platform also helps patients navigate the health care system and obtain timely care and maximize any follow-up care. They are now working to expand these efforts to reach more women with the goal of reducing breast cancer deaths in Rwanda and other low-income countries as well as shaping their national cancer control policy.

Progress Thus Far

Drs. Pace, Shulman, and Shyirambere developed and implemented a Women’s Cancer Early Detection Program Learning Collaborative in two key districts and 19 health centers in Rwanda. This Collaborative focuses on clinical mentorship, local leadership, and building a culture of data-driven practice improvement. In addition, they are seeking to offer U.S.-driven advancements in diagnostic curriculum to Rwandan radiologists. In partnership with local leaders and radiologists, the team has leveraged their success with virtual mentorship, employing previously trained Rwandan medical staff to implement virtual and in-person ultrasound training as well as to mentor other area radiologists. These efforts will help to decentralize breast ultrasound expertise from cancer hospitals in Rwanda to smaller district hospitals. In the last year, the doctors have refined a tool that will allow rigorous evaluation of trainees’ skills. To ensure that it is effective in measuring skills, they continue to assess and refine its performance. By adding details to the tool, they can make sure that trainees are able to accurately describe the characteristics of breast lesions viewed by ultrasound, an important part of judging whether they are benign or cancerous. They have also developed a similar tool to evaluate radiologists’ skill in performing biopsies and are currently testing it.

What’s next

While ultrasound imaging is successfully being decentralized, the team will continue to refine the ultrasound skills metric. These tools will help to judge if trainees have developed adequate skills to be able to perform ultrasounds and biopsies independently at their hospitals. The culmination of their BCRF supported work will not only expand the cadre of Rwandan clinicians with U.S. diagnostic skills, but it will provide scalable and durable strategies to bring these important diagnostic services closer to patients’ homes, facilitating accessible, timely, and high-quality breast cancer care.

Biography

Lydia Pace, MD, MPH, is a primary care physician and researcher in the Division of Women’s Health at Brigham and Women’s Hospital (BWH) and Associate Professor of Medicine at Harvard Medical School. Dr. Pace is also Interim Clinical and Research Director of the BWH Division of Women’s Health and leads BWH’s Global Women’s Health Fellowship. She received her medical degree from the University of California, San Francisco, completed her residency in internal medicine at Brigham and Women’s Hospital, and obtained a master’s in public health from the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health in Boston, MA.

Dr. Pace’s work combines clinical practice in primary care and women’s health with research on access to and utilization of breast cancer early detection and other women’s health services. Specifically, her research has focused on breast cancer early diagnosis, screening, shared decision-making and care, with a particular focus on using implementation science methodology to understand and address disparities in breast cancer diagnosis, treatment, and outcomes in the United States and sub-Saharan Africa.

From 2011 through 2014, Dr. Pace lived in Rwanda where she worked as an internist in the Departments of Internal Medicine and Oncology at Butaro Hospital. She also served as District Clinical Advisor for Partners in Health/Inshuti Mu Buzima in Rwanda from 2011-2012 and as Deputy Director of the PIH/IMB Women’s Health Program from 2013-2014. Since that time, Dr. Pace has collaborated with Drs. Lawrence Shulman, Cyprien Shyirambere, and other Rwandan clinical and policy leaders to develop clinical programs, infrastructure, and policies to facilitate earlier diagnosis of breast cancer in Rwanda. She has also collaborated with researchers in other low- and middle-income countries addressing these issues and served as co-lead of the World Health Organization’s Global Breast Cancer Initiative’s Early Diagnosis Working Group.

She returned to the U.S. where she completed a postdoctoral fellowship at the NIH Training Institute for Dissemination and Implementation Research in Health in Bethesda, MD. Dr. Pace has received several awards including the Extraordinary Women Advancing Healthcare Award from The Women’s Edge (2022), BWH’s Internal Medicine Residency Research Mentor Award (2020), SGIM Northeast Regional Award for Excellence in Clinician Investigation (2019), and a Young Leader award from the Breast Health Global Initiative (2018).

BCRF Investigator Since

2025

Areas of Focus

Treatment

Co-Investigator

Lawrence Shulman, MD, MPH

University of Pennsylvania
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

Cyprien Shyirambere, MD, MPH

Butaro Cancer Center of Excellence
Butaro, Rwanda

legacy Society

Support research with a legacy gift. Sample, non-binding bequest language:

I give to the Breast Cancer Research Foundation, located in New York, NY, federal tax identification number 13-3727250, ________% of my total estate (or $_____).

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