Williams C K
IARC Sci Publ. 1984(63):687-712.
Reports from various parts of Africa have documented the epidemiological features of leukaemia as including: infrequent diagnosis of acute lymphoblastic leukaemia (ALL) below the age of 5 years; frequent association of acute myelogenous leukaemia (AML) with chloromas; frequent occurrence, predominantly in women, of chronic lymphocytic leukaemia (CLL) below the age of 50 years. The biological and epidemiological features of leukaemia subtypes were determined in 146 patients who were seen prospectively between July 1978 and June 1982. There were 44 cases of chronic myelocytic leukaemia (CML), 34 of ALL, 33 of AML and 31 of CLL. The age distribution and incidence of CML in Ibadan was similar to those of the Black and White populations of the United States. The incidence of ALL in 0-4 year-old Ibadan children was estimated to be less than one-third and one-tenth of those of Black and White children in the United States, respectively, but the incidence of the disease was similar for the 3 populations in the third quinquennium. AML appeared to be more prevalent in 5-9-year-old Nigerian children than in children in the United States and was associated with chloroma in 5 of 9 (55.6%) children in the age-group. As a group, children with ALL were of significantly higher socio-economic status than those with AML. CLL occurred below 50 years predominantly in women (male:female = 1:6) who were significantly of lower socioeconomic status than their CML counterparts. Male patients predominated (male:female = 5.3) at and above 50 years. Numerous factors indicating a poor prognosis co-existed in all ALL patients, including male sex (25/34), WBC greater than 10(10)/litre (31/34, greater than 10(11)/litre (10/34), L2 or L3 morphology (21/25), periodic acid Schiff (PAS) negativity (15/19) and tissue invasion (15/34), thus giving the impression that ALL in young Nigerians is predominantly of an aggressive and hyperproliferative type. The epidemiological features of ALL and CLL in Africans suggest a role for the influence of life-style in leukaemogenesis while the clinical patterns of these disorders suggest that the biological characteristics differ from those of similar diseases in developed countries.
来自非洲各地的报告记录了白血病的流行病学特征,包括:5岁以下儿童急性淋巴细胞白血病(ALL)诊断不常见;急性髓系白血病(AML)常伴有绿色瘤;慢性淋巴细胞白血病(CLL)在50岁以下人群中频繁发生,且以女性为主。1978年7月至1982年6月期间前瞻性观察了146例患者,以确定白血病亚型的生物学和流行病学特征。其中慢性髓细胞白血病(CML)44例,ALL 34例,AML 33例,CLL 31例。伊巴丹CML的年龄分布和发病率与美国黑人和白人人群相似。据估计,伊巴丹0至4岁儿童ALL的发病率分别不到美国黑人和白人儿童的三分之一和十分之一,但在第三个五年期,这三个人群的该疾病发病率相似。AML在5至9岁的尼日利亚儿童中似乎比在美国儿童中更为普遍,在该年龄组的9名儿童中有5名(55.6%)与绿色瘤有关。总体而言,ALL患儿的社会经济地位显著高于AML患儿。CLL主要发生在50岁以下的女性中(男:女=1:6),其社会经济地位明显低于CML女性患者。50岁及以上男性患者占主导(男:女=5.3)。所有ALL患者中同时存在许多提示预后不良的因素,包括男性(25/34)、白细胞大于10(10)/升(31/34)、大于10(11)/升(10/34)、L2或L3形态(21/25)、过碘酸希夫(PAS)阴性(15/19)和组织浸润(15/34),因此给人的印象是,尼日利亚年轻患者中的ALL主要是侵袭性和高增殖性类型。非洲人ALL和CLL的流行病学特征表明生活方式在白血病发生过程中具有影响作用,而这些疾病的临床模式表明其生物学特征与发达国家类似疾病不同。