Abstract
Background
Childhood cancers are known to cause significant morbidity and mortality, and the incidence has been increasing exponentially in developing countries. Two studies performed in Namibia in 1988 and 2010 have shown changes in the pattern of paediatric cancers over the years. There is a constant need to have updated statistics on the changing trends in the frequency of different types of cancers to inform policy hence the reason for the current study.
Methods
An analytical retrospective cohort study was performed to analyse paediatric oncology cases that were admitted to the paediatric oncology unit (ward 8 west) at Windhoek Central Hospital (WCH) between 01 January 2011 and 31 December 2020. The study analysed the files of paediatric patients admitted with a paediatric cancer diagnosis from the age of 0 to 16 years. The research data was collected between July 2021 and September 2022.
Results
A total of 174 paediatric cancer patient files met the inclusion criteria. Haematopoietic cancers were the most commonly occurring diagnosis of a paediatric cancer type in the study population (44.8%), of which leukaemias were the most common type of haematopoietic cancer. The other types of cancer apart from haematopoietic cancers consisted of embryonal cancers (37.9%), soft tissue and bone sarcomas (13.8%), and brain or CNS cancers (3.4%). The median age at diagnosis was 5.13 years, with an age range of 0 to 15 years. Fifty five point seven percent (55.7%) were males and 44.3% were females, with a male: female ratio of 1.26:1. Overall, most of the cancers were positively correlated with age, with the interactive-forward test indicating that the method of diagnosis and time significantly (P < 0.05) affected identification at the hospital.
Conclusions
Haematopoietic cancers remain most common type in Namibia. However, there has been a change in the ranking of the other childhood cancer subtypes over the last 3 decades. Good access to diagnosis and treatment modalities was noted as key to detection and clinical outcomes in the last 10 years (2011 to 2020). For future follow-up studies, prospective studies are recommended.
Publisher
Public Library of Science (PLoS)
Reference25 articles.
1. New WHO report highlights scale of childhood cancer inequalities in the European Region. Newsroom. Available: https://www.who.int/europe/news/item/15-02-2022-new-who-report-highlights-scale-of-childhood-cancer-inequalities-in-the-european-region. Accessed on 23 August 2022 [press release]. 2022.
2. International incidence of childhood cancer, 2001–10: a population-based registry study;E Steliarova-Foucher;The Lancet Oncology,2017
3. Male Sex and the Risk of Childhood Cancer: The Mediating Effect of Birth Defects;EL Marcotte;JNCI Cancer Spectr,2020
4. Childhood Cancers in Zimbabwe: A 10 year review of the Zimbabwe National Cancer Registry data;I Chitsike;Cent Afr J Med,2014