Women's Health Research Unit, School of Public Health and Family Medicine, University of Cape Town Faculty of Health Sciences, Cape Town, Western Cape, South Africa
Cancer Research Initiative, University of Cape Town Faculty of Health Sciences, Cape Town, Western Cape, South Africa.
BMJ Open. 2022 Apr 25;12(4):e054501. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2021-054501.
To systematically synthesise available evidence on the nature and effectiveness of interventions for improving timely diagnosis of breast and cervical cancers in low and middle-income countries (LMICs).
A systematic review of published evidence. The review was conducted and reported in accordance with the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Review and Meta-Analyses.
A comprehensive search of published literature was conducted. In addition, relevant grey literature sources and bibliographical references of included studies were searched for potentially eligible evidence.
Studies published between January 2010 and November 2020 were eligible for inclusion. To be eligible, studies had to report on interventions/strategies targeted at women, the general public or healthcare workers, aimed at improving the timely diagnosis of breast and/or cervical cancers in LMIC settings.
Literature search, screening, study selection, data extraction and quality appraisal were conducted by two independent reviewers. Evidence was synthesised and reported using a global taxonomy framework for early cancer diagnosis.
From the total of 10 593 records identified, 21 studies conducted across 20 LMICs were included in this review. Most of the included studies (16/21) focused primarily on interventions addressing breast cancers; two focused on cervical cancer while the rest examined multiple cancer types. Reported interventions targeted healthcare workers (12); women and adolescent girls (7) and both women and healthcare workers (3). Eight studies reported on interventions addressing access delays; seven focused on interventions addressing diagnostic delays; two reported on interventions targeted at addressing both access and diagnostic delays, and four studies assessed interventions addressing access, diagnostic and treatment delays. While most interventions were demonstrated to be feasible and effective, many of the reported outcome measures are of limited clinical relevance to diagnostic timeliness.
Though limited, evidence suggests that interventions aimed at addressing barriers to timely diagnosis of breast and cervical cancer are feasible in resource-limited contexts. Future interventions need to address clinically relevant measures to better assess efficacy of interventions.
CRD42020177232.
系统综合现有证据,评估改善中低收入国家(LMICs)乳腺癌和宫颈癌及时诊断的干预措施的性质和效果。
对已发表证据进行系统评价。该评价按照系统评价和荟萃分析的首选报告项目进行了开展和报告。
对已发表文献进行了全面检索。此外,还对纳入研究的相关灰色文献来源和参考文献进行了检索,以寻找可能符合条件的证据。
纳入的研究需在 2010 年 1 月至 2020 年 11 月期间发表。要符合条件,研究必须报告针对妇女、公众或卫生保健工作者的干预措施/策略,旨在改善中低收入国家乳腺癌和/或宫颈癌的及时诊断。
由两名独立审查员进行文献搜索、筛选、研究选择、数据提取和质量评估。使用早期癌症诊断的全球分类法框架综合和报告证据。
从总共确定的 10593 条记录中,纳入了本综述中来自 20 个中低收入国家的 21 项研究。大多数纳入的研究(21 项中的 16 项)主要关注针对乳腺癌的干预措施;2 项研究针对宫颈癌,其余研究则检查了多种癌症类型。报告的干预措施针对卫生保健工作者(12 项);妇女和少女(7 项)以及妇女和卫生保健工作者(3 项)。8 项研究报告了针对就诊延误的干预措施;7 项研究专注于针对诊断延误的干预措施;2 项研究报告了针对同时解决就诊和诊断延误的干预措施,以及 4 项研究评估了针对就诊、诊断和治疗延误的干预措施。尽管证据有限,但有证据表明,针对及时诊断乳腺癌和宫颈癌的障碍的干预措施在资源有限的环境中是可行的。未来的干预措施需要解决与临床相关的措施,以更好地评估干预措施的效果。
CRD42020177232。