| Literature DB >> 36161211 |
Chalachew Tiruneh1, Teshome Gebremeskel2, Mogesie Necho3, Yossef Teshome4, Daniel Teshome5, Asmare Belete3.
Abstract
Objective: To systematically summarize the burden of gastroschisis and omphalocele in Sub-Saharan Africa.Entities:
Keywords: Prevalence; abdominal wall defect; gastroschisis; omphalocele
Year: 2022 PMID: 36161211 PMCID: PMC9500260 DOI: 10.1177/20503121221125536
Source DB: PubMed Journal: SAGE Open Med ISSN: 2050-3121
Figure 1.PRISMA—adapted flow diagram showed the results of the search and reasons for exclusion [45].
Distribution of included studies on birth prevalence of congenital abdominal defects in Sub-Saharan Africa, from January 2000 to December 2020.
| Author name | Year | Country | Design | Sample size | Congenital anomaly cases | Omphalocele | Gastroschisis |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mashuda et al.
| 2014 | Tanzania | CRS | 445 | 131 | 1.8 | 1.34 |
| Seyoum et al.
| 2019 | Ethiopia | CRS | 19,650 | 317 | 5.86 | |
| Serunjogi et al.
| 2019 | Uganda | CRS | 100,189 | 462 | 8 | 3.67 |
| Taye et al.
| 2019 | Ethiopia | CRS | 76,201 | 1518 | 0.92 | |
| Abbey et al.
| 2017 | Nigeria | CRS | 7670 | 159 | 3.77 | |
| Kalisya et al.
| 2015 | DRC | CRS | 1301 | 1301 | 0.76 | |
| Oluwafemi et al.
| 2019 | Nigeria | CRS | 8307 | 39 | 20.5 | 2.56 |
| Ochoga et al.
| 2018 | Nigeria | CRS | 843 | 72 | 9.72 | 11.1 |
| Takai et al.
| 2019 | Nigeria | CRS | 6990 | 305 | 5.57 | 2.95 |
| Ajao et al.
| 2019 | Nigeria | CRS | 1057 | 67 | 7.5 | |
| Okonkwo et al.
| 2011 | Nigeria | Cohort | 1513 | 85 | 14.1 | 4.7 |
| Anyanwu et al.
| 2015 | Nigeria | Cohort | 1456 | 41 | 2.5 | 4.8 |
| Onankpa et al.
| 2014 | Nigeria | Cohort | 6578 | 24 | 8.3 | |
| Singh et al.
| 2015 | Nigeria | Cohort | 10,163 | 72 | 5.6 |
CRS: cross-sectional; DRC: Democratic Republic of Congo.
Figure 2.Forest plot showing the pooled prevalence of omphalocele among congenital defect patients in Sub-Saharan Africa, from January 2000 and December 2020.
Subgroup analysis on the pooled birth prevalence of major congenital abdominal wall defects in Sub-Saharan Africa from January 2000 to December 2020.
| Variables | Characteristics | Pooled prevalence | I2 (p-value) |
|---|---|---|---|
| By country | Nigeria | 6.65 (4.18, 9.13) | 48.1% (0.052) |
| Uganda | 8.0 (5.53,10.47) | – | |
| Ethiopia | 3.22 (−1.61, 8.05) | 92.6 (<0.001) | |
| By study design | Cross-sectional | 4.04 (2.62, 5.46) | 87.7% (<0.001) |
| Cohort | 6.92% (1.94, 11.91) | 85.6% (<0.001) | |
| By year of publication | 2000–2014 | 7.5% (−1.27, 16.26) | 81.1 (<0.005) |
| 2015–2020 | 4.34 (2.84, 5.85) | 87.8 (<0.001) |
Figure 3.Forest plot showing the subgroup analysis of the pooled prevalence of congenital omphalocele among congenital defect patients based on study design in Sub-Saharan Africa, from January 2000 and December 2020.
Figure 4.Forest plot showing subgroup analysis of the pooled prevalence of omphalocele among congenital defect patients by country/region in Sub-Saharan Africa, from January 2000 and December 2020.
Figure 5.Forest plot showing subgroup analysis of the pooled birth prevalence of omphalocele patients by year of publication in Sub-Saharan Africa, from January 2000 and December 2020.
Figure 6.Forest plot showing the pooled birth prevalence of gastoschisis in Sub-Saharan Africa, from January 2000 to December 2020.