Uganda Cancer Institute, Kampala, Uganda.
Department of Public Health and Manchester Academic Health Sciences Centre, University of Manchester, Manchester, UK.
BMC Cancer. 2023 Aug 18;23(1):772. doi: 10.1186/s12885-023-11124-6.
Population based cancer registries (PBCRs) are accepted as the gold standard for estimating cancer incidence in any population. However, only 15% of the world's population is covered by high quality cancer registries with coverage as low as 1.9% in settings such as Africa. This study was conducted to assess the operational feasibility of estimating cancer incidence using a retrospective "catchment population" approach in Uganda.
A retrospective population study was conducted in 2018 to identify all newly diagnosed cancer cases between 2013 and 2017 in Mbarara district. Data were extracted from the medical records of health facilities within Mbarara and from national and regional centres that provide cancer care services. Cases were coded according to the International Classification of Diseases for Oncology (ICD-0-03). Data was analysed using CanReg5 and Excel.
We sought to collect data from 30 health facilities serving Mbarara district, southwestern Uganda. Twenty-eight sources (93%) provided approval within the set period of two months. Among the twenty-eight sources, two were excluded, as they did not record addresses for cancer cases, leaving 26 sources (87%) valid for data collection. While 13% of the sources charged a fee, ranging from $30 to $100, administrative clearance and approval was at no cost in most (87%) data sources. This study registered 1,258 new cancer cases in Mbarara district. Of the registered cases, 65.4% had a morphologically verified diagnosis indicating relatively good quality of data. The Age-Standardised Incidence Rates for all cancers combined were 109.9 and 91.9 per 100,000 in males and females, respectively. In males, the most commonly diagnosed cancers were prostate, oesophagus, stomach, Kaposi's sarcoma and liver. In females, the most common malignancies were cervix uteri, breast, stomach, liver and ovary. Approximately, 1 in 8 males and 1 in 10 females would develop cancer in Mbarara before the age of 75 years.
Estimating cancer incidence using a retrospective cohort design and a "catchment population approach" is feasible in Uganda. Periodic studies using this approach are potentially a precious resource for producing quality cancer data in settings where PBCRs are scarce. This could supplement PBCR data to provide a detailed and comprehensive picture of the cancer burden over time, facilitating the direction of cancer control efforts in resource-limited countries.
人群癌症登记处(PBCR)被认为是估算任何人群癌症发病率的金标准。然而,只有 15%的世界人口被高质量的癌症登记处覆盖,在非洲等地区的覆盖率低至 1.9%。本研究旨在评估在乌干达使用回顾性“集水区人群”方法估算癌症发病率的操作可行性。
2018 年进行了一项回顾性人群研究,以确定 2013 年至 2017 年间在姆巴拉拉区新诊断的所有癌症病例。数据从姆巴拉拉地区卫生机构的医疗记录以及提供癌症护理服务的国家和区域中心提取。病例根据国际肿瘤疾病分类(ICD-0-03)进行编码。使用 CanReg5 和 Excel 进行数据分析。
我们试图从为乌干达西南部姆巴拉拉区提供服务的 30 个卫生机构收集数据。在两个月的设定期限内,有 28 个来源(93%)提供了批准。在这 28 个来源中,有两个被排除在外,因为它们没有记录癌症病例的地址,留下 26 个来源(87%)可用于数据收集。虽然 13%的来源收取费用,从 30 美元到 100 美元不等,但在大多数(87%)数据源中,行政许可和批准是免费的。本研究在姆巴拉拉区登记了 1258 例新癌症病例。在登记的病例中,65.4%有形态学验证诊断,表明数据质量相对较好。男女两性癌症的年龄标准化发病率分别为每 10 万人 109.9 和 91.9。在男性中,最常见的癌症是前列腺癌、食管癌、胃癌、卡波西肉瘤和肝癌。在女性中,最常见的恶性肿瘤是宫颈癌、乳腺癌、胃癌、肝癌和卵巢癌。在姆巴拉拉区,大约每 8 个男性和每 10 个女性中就有 1 个会在 75 岁之前患上癌症。
在乌干达,使用回顾性队列设计和“集水区人群方法”估算癌症发病率是可行的。定期使用这种方法进行研究可能是在缺乏人群癌症登记处的情况下产生高质量癌症数据的宝贵资源。这可以补充人群癌症登记处的数据,提供随时间推移的癌症负担的详细和全面的图片,从而为资源有限的国家的癌症控制工作提供指导。