Agodirin Olayide S, Aremu Isiaka, Rahman Ganiyu A, Olatoke Samuel A, Akande Halimat J, Oguntola Adetunji S, Olasehinde Olalekan, Ojulari Sheriff, Etonyeaku Amarachukwu, Olaogun Julius, Romanoff Anya
Department of Surgery, University of Ilorin and University of Ilorin Teaching Hospital, Ilorin, Kwara State, Nigeria.
Department of Surgery, University of Ilorin Teaching Hospital, Ilorin, Kwara State, Nigeria.
JCO Glob Oncol. 2020 May;6:731-742. doi: 10.1200/JGO.19.00402.
The prevalence of themes linked to delay in presentation of breast cancer (BC) and their underlying factors vary considerably throughout Africa. Regional differences and trends are largely unreported. The purpose of this research was to provide summary estimates of the prevalence and distribution of the themes and underlying factors linked to delay in the presentation of BC, regional variation, and trends in an effort to identify targets for intervention.
We screened articles found through PubMed/Medline, African Journal OnLine, Science Direct, Google/Google Scholar, and ResearchGate. We included patient-reported surveys on the reasons linked to delayed presentation under 6 previously identified themes: symptom misinterpretation, fear, preference for alternative care, social influence, hospital-related factors, and access factors. The meta-analytical procedure in MetaXL used the quality-effect model.
Twelve of the 236 identified articles were eligible for this review. The overall summary estimate of late presentation (> 90 days) was 54% (95% CI, 23 to 85) and was worst in the eastern and central regions. Symptom misinterpretation was the most common theme (50%; 95% CI, 21 to 56), followed by fear (17%; 95% CI, 3 to 27), hospital-related theme (11%; 95% CI, 1 to 21), preference for alternative care (10%; 95% CI, 0 to 21), social influence (7%; 95% CI, 0 to 14), and access-related theme (6%; 95% CI, 0 to 13). The most common factor underlying symptom misinterpretation was mischaracterizing the breast lesion as benign (60%; 95% CI, 4 to 100) which surpassed lack of awareness in the last decade. Misdiagnosis and failure to refer were the dominant hospital-related factors.
Modifiable factors such as mischaracterizing malignant masses as benign, fear, misdiagnosis, and failure to refer were the prevalent factors contributing to delays throughout Africa. These factors are promising targets for intervention.
与乳腺癌(BC)就诊延迟相关的主题及其潜在因素在非洲各地的患病率差异很大。区域差异和趋势在很大程度上未被报道。本研究的目的是提供与BC就诊延迟相关的主题、潜在因素、区域差异和趋势的患病率及分布的汇总估计,以便确定干预目标。
我们筛选了通过PubMed/Medline、《非洲在线期刊》、《科学Direct》、谷歌/谷歌学术和ResearchGate找到的文章。我们纳入了患者报告的关于与延迟就诊相关原因的调查,这些原因分为先前确定的6个主题:症状误解、恐惧、对替代治疗的偏好、社会影响、医院相关因素和就诊因素。MetaXL中的荟萃分析程序使用了质量效应模型。
236篇已识别文章中有12篇符合本综述的要求。就诊延迟(>90天)的总体汇总估计为54%(95%CI,23至85),在东部和中部地区最为严重。症状误解是最常见的主题(50%;95%CI,21至56),其次是恐惧(17%;95%CI,3至27)、医院相关主题(11%;95%CI,1至21)、对替代治疗的偏好(10%;95%CI,0至21)、社会影响(7%;95%CI,0至14)和就诊相关主题(6%;95%CI,0至13)。症状误解最常见的潜在因素是将乳腺病变误判为良性(60%;95%CI,4至100),这一因素在过去十年超过了认识不足。误诊和未转诊是主要的医院相关因素。
可改变的因素,如将恶性肿块误判为良性、恐惧、误诊和未转诊,是导致整个非洲就诊延迟的普遍因素。这些因素是有希望进行干预的目标。