Clinical epidemiology and mortality risk factors of gastric cancer in a sub-Saharan African setting: a retrospective analysis of 120 cases in Yaoundé (Cameroon).
Guy Aristide Bang, Eric Patrick Savom, Blondel Nana Oumarou, Cynthia Karelle Mboupda Ngamy, Georges Bwelle Moto, Yannick Mahamat Ekani Boukar, Pierre René Binyom, Arthur Essomba, Maurice Aurélien Sosso
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: in sub-Saharan Africa, there is scare published data on cancer in general and gastric cancer in particular. METHODS: we conducted a multicenter retrospective analysis of the medical records of patients followed for gastric cancer in 5 hospital departments in the city of Yaoundé (Cameroon) over 6 years. RESULTS: we recorded a total of 120 patients with a mean age of 53.4 ± 13.7 years. There were 62 females (51.7%). The most common risk factors for gastric cancer in our patients was Helicobacter pylori infection (59 cases, 49.1%). Seventy-six patients (63.3%) consulted within 1 to 6 months of symptoms on set at the forefront of which chronic epigastralgia (74.1%). At endoscopy, the tumor was mostly located at the antrum and was locally advanced or metastatic in 25.8% and 58.4 of cases respectively. Adenocarcinoma was the main histologic type found in 105 (87.5%) cases. Curative treatment could only be implemented in 26.7% of patients. We noted a total of 85 deaths (70.8%) with a mean survival time of 5.91 ± 7.51 months. Survival rate at 3 and 5 years was 10.1% and 4.6%, respectively. On multivariable analysis, variables independently associated with overall survival included: WHO stage 3 performance status (p = 0.042), palpable epigastric mass on examination (p = 0.042), pyloric localization (p = 0.007), and liver metastasis (p = 0.012). CONCLUSION: clinical epidemiology of gastric cancer in our study is comparable to those of other African studies with a predominance of locally advanced/metastatic forms. Prognosis is grim with diagnostic delay behind all of the identified mortality risk factors.