| Literature DB >> 33985540 |
Toby Ellis1, Elvis Eze2, Bahijja Tolulope Raimi-Abraham3.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: Cancer and malaria both have high incidence rates and are leading causes of mortality worldwide, especially in low and middle-income countries with reduced access to the quality healthcare. The objective of this critical review was to summarize key associations and new perspectives between the two diseases as is reported in existing literature.Entities:
Keywords: Burkitt’s lymphoma; Cancer; Comorbidity; Epstein-Barr virus; Malaria; Neutropenia
Year: 2021 PMID: 33985540 PMCID: PMC8117320 DOI: 10.1186/s13027-021-00370-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Infect Agent Cancer ISSN: 1750-9378 Impact factor: 2.965
The inclusion criteria used to select relevant papers to be included in the literature review
| Inclusion Criteria: | Exclusion Criteria: |
|---|---|
| Keywords “Malaria” AND “Cancer” | Keywords not included |
| Research articles only | Non research articles (i.e. reviews, book chapter, abstract, PhD/MSc thesis etc. …) |
| Published between 1st January 2000 – 1st July 2020 | Published before 1st January 2000 or on/after 1st July 2020 |
| Written in English | Not written in English |
| Refined to relate to Malaria within field of oncology | Not relevant in the field of oncology or relating to either malaria or cancer only |
| Does not meet exclusion criteria | Does not meet inclusion criteria |
Search results upon applying specific search criteria to refine the Web of Science search results to fit the specifically designed inclusion criteria (in Table 1)
| Search Criteria: | No. Search Results: |
|---|---|
| Keywords: “Malaria” and “Cancer” | 1753 |
| Publication Years “2000–2020” | 1661 |
| Document Types: “Articles” | 1129 |
| Languages: “English” | 1117 |
| Research Areas: “Oncology” | 119 |
Fig. 1Simplified schematic representation of the systematic review process used in this literature review
Fig. 2Frequency of sample type used in included articles
Fig. 3Frequency (by percentage) of each Region/Country studied in included articles that sampled human populations
Fig. 4Frequency of methodologies used in eligible articles