| Literature DB >> 31885569 |
Ayun Cassell1, Bashir Yunusa2, Mohamed Jalloh1, Medina Ndoye1, Mouhamadou M Mbodji1, Abdourahmane Diallo1, Saint Charles Kouka3, Issa Labou1, Lamine Niang1, Serigne M Gueye1.
Abstract
The estimated incidence rate of prostate cancer in Africa was 22.0/100,000 in 2016. The International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) has cited prostate cancer as a growing health threat in Africa with approximated 28,006 deaths in 2010 and estimated 57,048 deaths in 2030. The exact incidence of advanced and metastatic prostate cancer is not known in sub-Saharan Africa. Hospital-based reports from the region have shown a rising trend with most patients presenting with advanced or metastatic disease. The management of advanced and metastatic prostate cancer is challenging. The available international guidelines may not be cost-effective for an African population. The most efficient approach in the region has been surgical castration by bilateral orchidectomy or pulpectomy. Medical androgen deprivation therapy is expensive and may not be available. Patients with metastatic castrate-resistant prostate cancer tend to be palliated due to the absence or cost of chemotherapy or second-line androgen deprivation therapy in most of Africa. A cost-effective guideline for developing nations to address the rising burden of advanced prostate cancer is warranted at this moment.Entities:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31885569 PMCID: PMC6915139 DOI: 10.1155/2019/1785428
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Oncol ISSN: 1687-8450 Impact factor: 4.375
The demographics, biodata, staging presentation, PSA, and Gleason grade group of patients with prostate cancer in sub-Saharan nations.
| Study | No. of patients | Mean age in years | Age range in years | Staging presentation | PSA range | Mean PSA | Highest Gleason grade group |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Diallo et al. (Senegal) [ | 156 | 75.3 | 52–100 | Advanced/metastatic | 1,300–2,104 | 1991.5 | Group 4 (36%) |
| Botcho et al. (Togo) [ | 132 | 71 ± 12.6 | 45–99 | Advanced/metastatic | 5–9,998 | 1373.3 ± 1078 | Groups 3–5 (46%) |
| Kirakoya et al. (Burkina) [ | 82 | 68.9 ± 9.5 | 49–95 | 98.6% (T3/T4) 40.2% metastasis | 13–9,224 | 746 | Group 1 (59.7%) |
| Ndoye et al. (Senegal) [ | 102 | 71 ± 9 | 51–96 | Advanced/metastatic | 5.88–21,660 | 1447.6 ± 812 | Groups 2–5 |
| Tengue et al. (Togo) [ | 232 | 68.5 ± 9.6 | 82.9% (T3/T4) 75.9% metastasis | 123.5 | Groups 2-3 (34.5%) | ||
| Ekwere and Egbe (Nigeria) [ | 145 | 66.6 ± 9.8 | 35–88 | 81.4% (T3/T4) | |||
| Kaboré et al. (Burkina) [ | 168 | 68.59 ± 9.41 | 30 to 95 | 86% (T3/T4) | 1–7,421 | 483.3 + 145.4 | Group 1 (60.1%) |
| Wasike and Magoha (Kenya) [ | 65 | 67 | 50–100 | 87.5% (T3/T4) | Group 4 (39.3%) | ||
| Kaboré et al. (Burkina) [ | 166 | 71.5 | 52–86 | 73.6% (T3/T4) | 8.4–17,850 | 537 | Groups 2-3 (54.7%) |
| Gueye et al. (Senegal) [ | 121 | 69 | 52–88 | 41.33% (T3/T4) 5.8% metastasis | 6–578.9 | 72.2 | |
| Ikuerowo et al. (Nigeria) [ | 43 | 60.8 | 40% (T3/T4) 35% metastasis | 0–438.3 | 2.5 | Groups 2–5 (74.4%) | |
| Badmus et al. (Nigeria) [ | 189 | 68 | 40–100 | 94.2% (T3/T4) 91% metastasis | 106 ± 187 | ||
| Folasire et al. (Nigeria) [ | 82 | 67 ± 1.8 | 47–87 | Advanced/metastatic | Groups 4-5 (38%) | ||
| Yeboah et al. (Ghana) [ | 699 | 70 ± 0.04 | 41–94 | 25% (T3/T4) 13% metastasis | 2.5–9,900 | 52.5 | Groups 2–5 (67.7%) |
| Konan et al. (Ivory coast) [ | 362 | 67.4 | 44–97 | 68.2% metastasis | 0–6000 | 315.0 | Groups 2-3 (48.6%) |
| Sow et al. (Senegal) [ | 102 | 71.1 ± 8.6 | 54–88 | Metastatic | PSA nadir | 1,167.7 | Group 3 |
The presenting symptoms and site of metastasis being either bony or visceral.
| Study | Commonest presenting symptoms | Commonest metastatic sites | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bony | Visceral | ||
| Diallo et al. [ | Obstructive LUTS (59.4%) | Spine (551%) | Lungs (14%) |
| Folasire et al. [ | Pain (70%) | Spine (94%) | Liver (18%) |
| Badmus et al. [ | Obstructive LUTS (82.5%) | Spine (46.1%) | Rectum (54.0%) |
| Kirakoya et al. [ | Obstructive LUTS (69.5%) | Spine (47.6%) | Lungs/liver (10.5%) |
| Yeboah et al. [ | Obstructive LUTS (16%) | Pelvic bone (8.2%) | Lungs (0.6%) |
| Ndoye et al. [ | Pain (31.3%) | Spine (22.5%) | Lungs (13.7%) |
| Tengue et al. [ | Obstructive LUTS (89.2%) | Spine/pelvic bone (79%) | Liver (6.8%) |
| Ekwere and Egbe [ | Obstructive LUTS (56%) | Spine/ribs | |
| Ikuerowo et al. [ | Spine/pelvic bone | ||
| Konan et al. [ | Obstructive LUTS (47.8%) | Spine (44.5%) | Lungs (13%) |
LUTS: lower urinary tract symptoms.
The available treatment modalities, the medications used, and the outcomes of treatment in some studies.
| Study | Available treatment modality | Available hormonotherapy drugs | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|
| Diallo et al. [ | Surgical ADT (76.3%), medical ADT (22.4%) | Cyproterone acetate | 8% castrate resistant |
| Botcho et al. [ | Surgical ADT (38.6%), medical ADT, both (18.9%) | Cyproterone acetate, flutamide, LHRH analogue, chemotherapy | |
| Tengue et al. [ | Surgical ADT (34.5%), medical ADT (12.5%), both (46.1%) | Cyproterone acetate, flutamide | 15.1% mortality |
| Kirakoya et al. [ | Surgical ADT (24.3%), medical ADT (62.2%), both (13.4%) | Cyproterone acetate, LHRH analogue | 10.9% mortality |
| Kaboré et al. [ | Surgical ADT (43.3%), medical ADT (19%), both (9.5%) | Cyproterone acetate, LHRH analogue | |
| Wasike and Magoha [ | Mostly surgical ADT, few medical ADT | Low-dose stilboestrol | |
| Badmus et al. [ | Surgical ADT (71.9%), medical ADT (24.3%), both (22.2%) | Stilboestrol, bicalutamide, goserelin, flutamide | 5-year overall survival (7.4%) |
| Yeboah et al. [ | Neoadjuvant hormonotherapy ± medical ADT, EBRT, brachytherapy, TUIP, TURP | Docetaxel, LHRH analogue, stilboestrol, bicalutamide /flutamide | 11% hospital mortality |
| Ekwere and Egbe [ | Surgical ADT and medical ADT | Stilboestrol | 0% 5-year overall survival |
| Konan et al. [ | Surgical ADT (86.2%), medical ADT (13.7%) | Cyproterone acetate, LHRH analogue | 16.2% mortality |
| Sow et al. [ | Group 1: surgical ADT and medical ADT only | Group 1: 6-month median (OS) |
ADT: androgen deprivation therapy; EBRT: external beam radiation therapy; LHRH: luteinizing hormone-releasing hormone; OS: overall survival; TUIP: transurethral incision of the prostate; TURP: transurethral resection of the prostate. Cytoreductive therapy includes open prostatectomy or TURP.