| Literature DB >> 33344257 |
Annie Apple1, Harold N Lovvorn2.
Abstract
Wilms tumor (WT) is the most common renal malignancy of childhood. Global disparities in WT have been reported with the highest incidence and lowest overall survival occurring in sub-Saharan African nations. After a detailed search of PubMed, we reviewed available literature on WT in sub-Saharan Africa and summarized findings that explore biologic and social factors contributing to this alarming cancer health disparity. Access to care and treatment abandonment are the most frequently reported factors associated with decreased outcomes. Implementation of multidisciplinary teams, collaborative networks, and financial support has improved overall survival in some nations. However, treatment abandonment remains a challenge. In high-income countries globally, WT therapy now is risk-stratified according to biology and histology. To a significantly lesser extent, biologic features have been studied only recently in sub-Saharan African WT, yet unique molecular and genetic signatures, including congenital anomaly-associated syndromes and biomarkers associated with treatment-resistance and poor prognosis have been identified. Together, challenges with access to and delivery of health care in addition to adverse biologic features likely contribute to increased burden of disease in sub-Saharan African children having WT. Publications on biologic features of WT that inform treatment stratification and personalized therapy in resource-limited regions of sub-Saharan Africa have lagged in comparison to publications that discuss social determinants of health. Further efforts to understand both WT biology and social factors relevant to appropriate treatment delivery should be prioritized in order to reduce health disparities for children residing in resource-limited areas of sub-Saharan Africa battling this lethal childhood cancer.Entities:
Keywords: Wilms tumor; health disparity; molecular features; social determinants of health; sub-Saharan Africa
Year: 2020 PMID: 33344257 PMCID: PMC7746839 DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2020.606380
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Oncol ISSN: 2234-943X Impact factor: 6.244
Publications on Wilms tumor among sub-Saharan Africans.
| Author | Journal/Date | Title | Country(ies) | Findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kyambi et al. ( | EastAfrican Medical Journal/1981 | The management of Wilms tumor in Kenya | Kenya | Late presentation and Loss to follow up (LTFU) |
| Kramer et al. ( | Medical and Pediatric Oncology/1984 | Racial Variation in incidence of Wilms tumor: relationship to congenital anomalies | United States | Genetic |
| Breslow et al. ( | Medical and Pediatric Oncology/1993 | Epidemiology of Wilms Tumor | Global | Genetic |
| Wessels et al. ( | Pediatric Hematology Oncology/1999 | Nutrition, morbidity, and survival in South African children with Wilms’ tumor | South Africa | Malnutrition |
| Ekenze et al. ( | Annals of Oncology/2006 | The challenge of nephroblastoma in a developing country | Nigeria | Health education and collaboration |
| Davidson et al. ( | Pediatric Blood Cancer/2006 | Wilms tumor experience in a South African Centre | South Africa | Treatment protocols and collaboration |
| Uba and Chirdan ( | West African Journal of Medicine/2007 | Wilms tumor: prognostic features in North Central Nigeria | Nigeria | LTFU |
| Rogers et al. ( | European Journal of Pediatric Surgery/2007 | Experience and outcomes of nephroblastoma in Johannesburg 1998-2003 | South Africa | Late presentation, collaboration |
| Israels et al. ( | Pediatric Blood Cancer/2009 | Acute malnutrition is common in Malawian patients with Wilms tumor: a role for peanut butter | Malawi | Late presentation, LTFU |
| Wilde et al. ( | African Journal of Paediatric Surgery/2010 | Challenges and outcome of Wilms’ tumor management in a resource-constrained setting | Malawi | Malnutrition, late presentation, LTFU, drug availability |
| Axt et al. ( | Journal of Surgical Research/2011 | Race disparities in Wilms tumor incidence and biology | United States | Proteomic |
| Tenge et al. ( | East African Medical Journal/2012 | Management and outcome of patients with Wilms Tumor (nephroblastoma) at the MOI Teaching and Referral Hospital, Eldoret, Kenya | Kenya | Late presentation, LTFU, drug availability |
| Murphy et al. ( | International Journal of Cancer/2012 | Molecular characterization of Wilms’ tumor from a resource-constrained region of sub-Saharan Africa | Kenya | Proteomic, Histologic |
| Axt et al. ( | Journal of Pediatric Surgery/2013 | Wilms tumor survival in Kenya | Kenya | LTFU, cost of treatment |
| Israels et al. ( | Pediatric Hematology Oncology/2014 | Management of children with Wilms tumor in Africa and Europe; thoughts about costs, priorities and collaboration | The Netherlands and Malawi | LTFU, malnutrition, cost of treatment, collaboration |
| Israels et al. ( | Pediatric Hematology Oncology/2014 | Clinical trials to improve childhood cancer care and survival in sub-Saharan Africa | Sub-Saharan Africa | LTFU, cost of treatment, collaboration |
| Libes et al. ( | Journal of the American College of Surgeons/2014 | Race disparities in peptide profiles of North American and Kenyan Wilms Tumor Specimens | United States and Kenya | Proteomic |
| Libes et al. ( | Pediatric Blood Cancer/2015 | Risk factors for abandonment of Wilms tumor therapy in Kenya | Kenya | Cost of treatment, education, drug availability |
| Paintsil et al. ( | European Journal of Cancer/2015 | The Collaborative Wilms Tumor Africa Project; baseline evaluation of Wilms tumor treatment and outcome in eight institutes in sub-Saharan Africa | Malawi, Cameroon, Ghana, Ethiopia, Uganda | LTFU and death during treatment |
| Kanyamuhunga et al. ( | Pan African Medical Journal/2015 | Treating childhood cancer in Rwanda: the nephroblastoma example | Rwanda | Late presentation, cost of treatment, education, health care personnel |
| Atanda et al. ( | African Journal of Paediatric Surgery/2015 | Wilms tumor: determinants of prognosis in an African setting | Kenya | Histologic |
| Lovvorn et al. ( | Genes, Chromosomes, and Cancer/2015 | Genetic and chromosomal alterations in Kenyan Wilms Tumor | Kenya | Genomic |
| Israels et al. ( | Pediatric Blood & Cancer/2018 | Improved outcome at end of treatment in the Collaborative Wilms tumor Africa Project | Malawi, Cameroon, Ghana, Ethiopia, Uganda | Collaboration, LTFU, cost of treatment |
| Yao et al. ( | Journal of Global Oncology/2019 | Treatment of Wilms Tumor in Sub-Saharan Africa: Results of the Second French African pediatric Oncology Group Study | Senegal, Madagascar, Cameroon, Cote D’Ivoire, Mali, Togo, Burkina Faso | Treatment availability |
| Ekenze et al. ( | Pediatric Blood & Cancer/2019 | Continuing barriers to care of Wilms tumor in a low-income country | Nigeria | Late presentation, cost of treatment, health care facilities |
| Chagaluka et al. ( | Pediatric Blood & Cancer/2020 | Improvement of overall survival in the Collaborative Wilms Tumor Africa Project | Malawi, Cameroon, Ghani, Ethiopia, Uganda | Collaboration, LTFU, cost of treatment |
Figure 1Cumulative publications over time by category. Publications on molecular determinants of health (Total = 7) have lagged in comparison to publications on social determinants of health (Total = 19) over time.