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Both are ONCC credentials, but they cover different scopes. The short version:
OCN certifies general adult oncology nursing, while CBCN certifies breast-care nursing
specifically.
OCN vs CBCN at a glance
| OCN | CBCN | |
|---|---|---|
| Scope | General adult oncology | Breast care nursing |
| Awarding body | ONCC | ONCC |
| Best for | Nurses across oncology settings | Nurses focused on breast cancer care |
| Valid for | 4 years | 4 years |
Which one should you choose?
- Choose OCN if you work across oncology — medical, surgical, radiation,
or mixed caseloads. It’s the broad, widely recognized oncology credential. - Choose CBCN if your practice centers on breast cancer — screening,
diagnosis, treatment, and survivorship — and you want a credential that reflects that focus. - Some nurses earn OCN first as their general oncology credential, then add a
subspecialty like CBCN as their practice narrows.
Either way, the preparation is the same: broad, timed, scenario-based practice with rationales.
Unlock 3,000+ OCN practice questions across 15 full-length simulators — $19.99 lifetime →
Sources & references
The exam facts on this page are drawn from official certifying-body materials, reviewed 2026-06-18 by the DrCertifications exam-prep team (10+ years in exam preparation and publishing).
