Tuesday Poster Session
Category: Colon

Isidro Pérez Coché, MD, MSc
Hospital Nacional de Uspantán, Quiché, Guatemala C.A.
Guatemala, Solola, Guatemala
This patient typifies Guatemala’s emerging CRC profile: diagnosis before age 50, prolonged symptom neglect, and life-altering surgery. Her three-year diagnostic delay reflects low cancer awareness, heavy reliance on traditional healers, and a 150 km journey to tertiary care. Living with a permanent stoma in poverty adds stigma and recurring supply costs. Nationally, the absence of FIT-based screening and scarce rural endoscopy capacity allow CRCs to progress silently; more than 60 % present at stage III/IV. Implementing low-cost FIT outreach in primary-care posts—paired with subsidised colonoscopy and culturally adapted education—could down-stage tumours, particularly in indigenous regions where poverty exceeds 80 %. Enhanced case documentation from rural hospitals would also refine incidence estimates now derived largely from modelling. This vignette therefore not only expands the clinical literature beyond Guatemala City but also underscores an actionable path toward equity-driven cancer prevention in Central America.

